New board president appointed O’Hagan hopes trustees can ‘work as a unit’
By BEN FIEBERT bfiebert@liherald.comMary Jo O’Hagan was sworn in as the new president of the Baldwin education board during the reorganization meeting earlier this month. Her term on the board will continue through the next year.
O’Hagan said she feels “comfortable” taking on the role of board president because she has experience in leadership positions with other committees and organizations. Her colleagues on the board have supported her for the post, deciding that this year is the right time for her to take over the top spot.
“This happened to be a year when I was avail-















Sinkhole filled in, Grand Ave. can now reopen
By BEN FIEBERT bfiebert@liherald.com

Workers have repaired the sinkhole that has caused major headaches on Grand Avenue in Baldwin — a month after the ground first split open.
The sinkhole, which was caused by a cracked sewer line, was filled in a week after committees for the Nassau County Legislature earmarked funds for emergency repairs on Grand Avenue. A portion of a $15 million lateral sewer repair budget line was used to fund the repairs — which was money originally set aside to repair the sinkhole on Lido Boulevard in Lido Beach.
soon as the scheduled Aug. 7 meeting of the full Legislature.
“This is the first of many significant investments that we must make in order to rebuild and reinforce Nassau County’s aging critical infrastructure,” said Legislator Debra Mulé, whose district includes the portion of Grand Avenue impacted by the sinkhole. “As we look ahead to the 2024 capital plan, I am committed to ensuring that vital resources for road, sewer and water infrastructure are our county’s top priorities.”
able, and everybody kind of felt I was in a better position to take on the extra work,” O’Hagan said.


O’Hagan said she plans to continue the work of previous board presidents and to “work (with the board) as a unit,” as well as with Baldwin School district superintendent Shari Camhi. She added that the role of the president is to be a “point person,” as the board works together to introduce different changes within the school district.

“I think what brings me most joy, both as president and trustee, is going to student presentations, going to student performances, and also seeing what our kids do in terms of their academic success,” O’Hagan said. “The board members are constantly on the lookout for opportunities for stu-
With the money funding both the repairs to the Lido Beach and Baldwin sinkholes, the lateral sewer budget line must be replenished to fund future emergency sewer repair projects in the county, officials said. Final approval for the additional money could come as
DEBRA MUlÉ county legislator
Earlier this month, Mulé sent letters to Gov. Kathy Hochul, U.S. Senate Majority Leader Chuck Schumer, Sen. Kirsten Gillibrand, Rep. Anthony D’Esposito and Nassau County Executive Bruce Blakeman, expressing the need for additional resources to repair and upgrade the county’s aging infrastructure. She also urged federal representatives to Continued on page 17

This is the first of many significant investments that we must make in order to rebuild and reinforce Nassau County’s aging critical infrastructure
Liberty Water urging customers to conserve water during the summer
As sprinkler systems are running and swimming pools are filling up, residents have an opportunity to put water conservation practices into play, ensuring that water pressure will not wane as the summer heat builds up.
“Conservation efforts are important all year long,” said Deborah Franco, president of Liberty New York Water. “Practicing smart water use this time of year is especially important and can benefit customers and the environment as we head into warmer weather and possibly dryer months.”
During dry spells, water infrastructure can struggle to keep up with the demand while also keeping storage tanks full, which impacts water pressure for our customers.
Throughout the summer months, residents are asked to only water their lawns according to the even and odd county ordinances — meaning even numbered houses water on even days and odd numbered house on odd days — and avoid all watering between 10:00 a.m. and 4:00 p.m., as these are peak evaporation times. Using smart controllers on irrigation systems is another way to conserve water.

To help cut back on usage, Liberty reminds the public of these water-saving tips:
Throughout the summer,
Follow Liberty’s zoned schedule for irrigation to prevent strain on the system and keep water pressure flowing.
Remember that lawns only need an inch of water per week to remain healthy.
Learn how to detect leaks in your home at www.libertyenergyandwater.


com.

Replace your standard irrigation controller with a smart irrigation controller. These systems connect to local weather stations to more accurately predict the watering needs of lawns and gardens.

If you don’t use a smart irrigation
methods
controller, watch the weather, and don’t water when rain is in the forecast.

Point your sprinklers at your lawn and avoid wasting water on sidewalks and driveways.
For more information, visit newyork-water.LibertyUtilities.com.
Dozens of community members attend talent show The event this past Saturday raised money for Michael Saintrome’s family


Hangout One Happy Place hosted a talent show to raise funds for Michael Saintrome, who was severely injured when a van hit him in January.
The event took place this past Saturday at Baldwin Harbor Park at 6:30 p.m. Angela Lucas, founder of Hangout One Happy Place, said that all the funds raised will go directly to Saintrome’s family. The people who per-



formed at the event were Saintrome’s friends and others that went to school with him.
Lucas said that if you couldn’t attend the fundraiser, you can send her a check at Hangout One Happy Place at 2959 Grand Ave, Baldwin or you can email her for venmo information at hangout1happyplace@gmail. com.
Hangout One Happy Place members singing and dancing.
Angela Lucas, founder of Hangout One Happy Place opens up the night’s event with thoughts and well wishes for Michael, who suffered from head trauma.
Branden Amores sings a soft, soulful song that had everyone’s attention.

Samantha Amores sings “Dreaming about you and me.”
Angela Lucas sings a song with George Voylatgis.
Courtesy Town of Hempstead
Councilwoman Laura Ryder, left, presenting a Certificate of Recognition to Steve Sciortino, right, for his business Delicious Moments Caterers.
Laura Ryder recognizes Baldwin business
Hempstead Town Councilwoman

Laura Ryder presented a Certificate of Recognition to Steve Sciortino, owner of Delicious Moments Caterers in Baldwin, as part of the town’s Small Business Spot-

Hundreds in damages from a burglary at Royal Roti Shop
A burglary occurred last Thursday at 3:20 am in Baldwin.
According to detectives, a 33-year-old male called the Nassau County Police and stated an unknown person had entered into the Royal Roti Shop located at 1747 Grand Avenue without permission and removed items while causing damage. The police reported that the front door had been pried open causing damage in excess of $300.

Further investigation revealed that two males used a crow bar and pried open the front door.


Once inside, the males dragged an ATM machine to the front of the store and destroyed it. An undisclosed amount of US currency was then removed. A tip jar kept on the store counter was also
smashed and an undetermined amount of US currency was also removed. The subjects then fled on foot out the back door into the rear parking lot in an unknown direction.
The first male is described as medium build, dark blue hooded sweatshirt, face mask, black pants, and black shoes.
The second male is described as medium build, red colored mask, black hooded sweat shirt, black shoes, black pants, and black gloves.
Detectives request that if anyone has information regarding the above crime to contact the Nassau County Crime Stoppers at 1 – 800 -244- TIPS. All callers will remain anonymous.
— Ben Fiebertlight.
The business is located on Merrick Road.
Baldwin High School hosts Climate Justice Youth Summit

Baldwin High School students in the Youth Change Leader Collaborative, YCLC, launched the first Long Island Climate Justice Youth Summit on Saturday, June 17.


The summit, which took place on the high school campus, aimed to better understand the interconnectedness of local communities and how youth voices can influence environmental change. In addition, the experience served as an opportunity for environmental youth groups from New York to collaborate on how to cultivate a healthier environment for Long Island. Approximately 75 students attended.
The YCLC is a group of young activists from Baldwin High School who joined together to form this special club, which meets every Tuesday in the school’s Learning Collaboratory. Through this extra-curricular activity, students, grades 10 to 12, research and gather data on four global issues and develop an action plan to help find a solution. Launched in the fall of 2022, the YCLC has already garnered media attention and accolades for their work across the four target areas, which are Gun Violence Prevention, Health Equity, Immigration Policy Reform, and Climate Justice.

Following opening remarks by Neil Testa, principal of Baldwin High School, and the YCLC Climate Justice team, the participants played an energy trivia game to share their knowledge of the environment while competing for fun prizes. Then, attendees engaged in three 30-minute breakout sessions to learn about the Long Island Sound Study National Estuary with outreach coordinator Jimena Perez-Viscasillas, Baldwin Middle School’s Youth Climate Projects with the district’s director of curriculum Stephanie Rengifo, and the Grassroots Environmental Education Initiative with the non-profit’s founder and executive director Patti Wood.
After lunch, keynote speaker Jayni Chase, chair of





Friends of the Earth and spouse to comedian/actor Chevy Chase—whom she credits as the inspiration for her environmental activism—discussed the importance of the summit and the power of young activists. She founded the Center for Environmental Education more than thirty years ago, which provided resources for K-12 schools and currently operates out of Unity College. Chase has also served on several boards, including The Alliance for Climate Education, the USGBC Center for Green Schools and The Billon Oyster Project.

The day culminated with the first annual Youth Activist Spotlight Award presented to Daphne Frias, a 25-yearold activist, who is proud to be a loud champion for disabled people, active in the fight against gun violence as well as the climate crisis. She shared her story and spoke

about the significance of student voice in the climate justice conversation.






As far as next steps, following reflections from audience members, this group of ‘changemakers’ pledged to continue their efforts in the fall and that this summit was just a starting point for something greater.
“We were very excited for our students to learn from the knowledge and expertise of our speakers and to also have this to cultivate a generation of climate leaders,” said Gabriella Franza, assistant director for instructional programs. “We are extremely proud of our high school students for being the driving force behind this vital movement for a sustainable future.”
— Ben FiebertDunn embraces second World Cup experience
By MICHAEL LEWIS sports@liherald.comParticipating in her second Women’s World Cup, Crystal Dunn is living by a simple philosophy: Embrace the moment.
“The question that many of us who have played in the World Cup get is: ‘Oh, it must be easy now’. I’m like, ‘No, it’s not easy now,’ because each World Cup is different,” she said.
This World Cup is different for the Rockville Centre native because Dunn is a mother for the first time. She has brought her 15-month-old son Marcel to New Zealand for the tournament.
“I took a massive amount of time off last year,” she said. “So everything, every moment that led to this moment is so different. It’s a different journey that I didn’t expect to be on. My message to players in their first World Cup is really just embrace it. It’s going to be wild. It’s going to be crazy. There’s going to be moments where you’re like, ‘Oh, my gosh, what did I sign up for?’ But that’s the beauty in it.”
The left back was a member of the 2019 U.S. team that won its second consecutive world championship in France in 2019. The Americans are vying to become the first team — men or women — to capture three successive World Cups.
“We remember that as the last team standing up, you realize that it was also worth it,” she said. “My message to everybody is play with a little bit of noise. It’s not something that you take for granted at all. People are on their fourth World Cup. People are in their first. You just have to embrace it and take that moment
and just smile and laugh with everybody along the way.”
Dunn and her U.S. Women’s National Team teammates got off to a solid start in this year’s tournament, recording a 3-0 win over Vietnam in their opener in Auckland, New Zealand last Saturday. The former South Side High School standout played 84 minutes before she was replaced by Kelly O’Hara. The Americans’ next Group E game is against the Netherlands this Wednesday at 9 p.m. (Fox, Telemundo, Universo and Peacock). They close out group play against Portugal on Aug. 1 at 3 a.m. (same channels.)
Only nine members of the current 23-player U.S. roster competed in France, so the 31-year-old Dunn is one of the team’s most experienced players.
“I find myself in a new role, being more of a veteran player, a leader on this team,” she said, lamenting that team captain and center back Becky Sauerbrunn couldn’t play due to a leg injury. “Becky is a massive loss for us. She is somebody whose impact is felt not only on the field but off the field.
“We’re ruthless,” Dunn continued. “As a backline that’s how we’ve always trained. Becky has been someone who set the tone and the standard for that. Without her being here, we have to be even more collective and relentless in our defending.”
Rockville Centre native Crystal Dunn played 84 minutes in a 3-0 victory for U.S. over Vietnam in last Saturday’s World Cup opener.

UNIONDALE SCHOOL DISTRICT Our Promise

Enrolling your children in public schools provides them with the opportunity to receive a well-rounded education in a diverse and inclusive environment, with a range of programs and resources. Uniondale Public Schools are also accountable to the community and operate under strict regulations, ensuring that every child receives a quality education regardless of their background or circumstances. With highly qualified teachers, a commitment to academic excellence, and a focus on equity and inclusion, our schools offer a comprehensive education that prepares students for success in college, career, and life.










































HERALD sports
NYS adds classification to seven sports
By TONY BELLISSIMO tbellissimo@liherald.comthe New York State Public High School Athletic Association is going from a five-classification format to six classifications in seven different sports – boys and girls soccer, boys and girls basketball, girls volleyball, baseball and softball – beginning this upcoming school year.
For Nassau and Suffolk County, it means more county champions, more Long Island championship games and more teams competing in state tournaments in those sports. The NYSPHSAA, which last summer voted to approve the new classifications, wanted to create approximate equal numbers across the state in each enrollment classification.
“Every section in the state is different, but for us in what used to be Class A we had more than 30 schools competing for one championship,” Section VIII athletics executive director Pat Pizzarelli said. “Now within that same group there’s an extra opportunity to win a championship.”
For example, Nassau boys and girls basketball had 58 schools compete in the 2022-23 campaign; 15 in Class AA, 34 in Class A and nine in Class B. This coming season, there will be 12 in Class AAA, 24 in Class AA, 17 in Class A, and four in Class B.
Among the second-tiered teams for boys and girls basketball (Class AA) will be Calhoun, Carey, East Meadow (down from the largest grouping), Elmont, Hewlett, Kennedy, Long Beach, MacArthur, Sewanhaka, South Side and Valley Stream Central. Class AA is for schools with an incoming enrollment (grades nine through 11) between 692 and 1,104 for boys, and between 699 and 1,112 for girls. The new Class A numbers are 391691 for boys, and 397-698 for girls.
“With the exception of Floral Park, the new AA schools on the boys side have had the Class A champ for the last 25 years,” said South Side’s Jerry D’Angelo, head coach of the reigning Nassau and Long Island Class A boys’ basketball champions. “So the new setup will give us two county champions among the 41 teams in AA and A.”

Suffolk had 59 boys and girls basketball programs this past winter with 25 competing in Class AA, 22 in Class A and four in Class B. For 2023-24, there would be 18 in Class AAA, 18 in Class AA and 13 in Class A.
Across the board, much of the largest group landscape in Nassau County remains unchanged with many of the fixtures like Baldwin, Farmingdale, Freeport, Massapequa, Plainview, Syosset and Uniondale will vie for a title. However, East Meadow and Valley Stream Central are two schools with dif-
as part
ference classifications based on sport. The Jets remained in AAA in soccer, baseball and softball but dropped to the second largest classification for hoops. The Eagles have an identical setup under the new breakdown but competed in Class A for basketball in recent seasons.
The classification numbers between basketball and soccer are slightly different. For soccer, Class AAA starts at 1,082 students and up on the girls side and 1,090 on the boys side. Softball and baseball breakdowns are closer to soccer than they are basketball, but are all within a range of less than 30.
One minor negative is Nassau and Suffolk will take on an extra expense of securing more postseason venues for some semifinals and finals, and the cost of sending more teams to state competitions.
“It’ll cost a little more money come tournament time with extra playoff games,” Pizzarelli said.
Nassau County softball coordinator Rachel Barry, who coaches Clarke, said the plan at this time is to stick with ability-based conferences during the regular season. “The playoffs will look pretty similar with some smaller brackets,” Barry said. “The extra classification balances our section a little bit better by spreading out the single A schools.
“Suffolk hosts next year’s Long Island championships, so it’s up to them to figure out locations,” she added. “As far as the state championships, softball isn’t going to be impacted as much since we no longer play the semis and finals on the same day. Adding another classification only adds three games to the mix.”

Covid-19 restrictions left recovery groups fighting alone Mental Health recovery communities on Long Island adapt amid pandemic
By CLARE GEHLICH InternWhile the physical and financial impact of Covid19 begins to subside, the lasting mental health effects continue to cast a shadow of uncertainty.
A silent crisis unfolded for recovery groups on Long Island as they faced an unprecedented challenge as they found themselves locked out and cut off from their personal healing and recovery. The repercussions of these patients and organizations still grapple with the aftermath.

The drug crisis and the disruptive drug supply contributed to the complexity of the situation. The loss of many jobs and financial instability worsened existing mental health struggles. Treatment facilities faced delays in their openings, resulting in limited access to essential medical and mental health support.
Many individuals lost their jobs and faced severe financial insecurity. On top of that, treatment facilities that were supposed to open then faced delays, which further aggravated access to essential medical and mental support.
Jeffrey Reynolds, president and CEO of the Family and Children’s Association, FCA, shed light on the surge of substance abuse. Elevated rates in drugs such as fentanyl, xylazine, even cocaine, and methamphetamine highlight the link between mental health issues in the community and these alarming spikes. The mental health issues that follow the post-Covid era create challenges for both young people and adults.
“When we think about why that is, it’s not too hard to connect the dots with mental health conditions in our community,” Reynolds said. “Whether we’re talking about young people or adults, the mental health issues post-Covid are really significant.”
Although numerous recovery groups shut down when former Governor Andrew Cuomo imposed restrictions on gatherings in 2020, others adapted by adjusting to online platforms. However, in recent years, many meetings returned to real-time meetings, establishing self-help or professionally led support networks.
Organizations like FCA continuously provide support services to vulnerable community members, including children, families, seniors, and neighborhoods. They strive to operate predominantly in-person services for as long as possible, recognizing the value of direct human connection in the healing and recovery processes. FCA’s range of services includes care management, family treatment and recovery centers, harm reduction initiatives, and elder abuse support, extending a lifeline to those in need.
Reynolds emphasized the deterioration of mental health conditions within the community, where the widespread effects of drugs and alcohol have high-

lighted those struggling with anxiety, depression, and other mental health illnesses.
“While we will want Covid and this chapter to be over more than anything in the world, the reality is it’s not over for a lot of folks,” Reynolds said. “Many are still struggling and we owe it to those folks to make sure that there’s proper care.”
The emotional impact of the pandem-
ic on young people will not disappear for another generation. As Long Island navigates the aftermath of the pandemic, it is essential to confront the mental health crisis head-on, united in the commitment to support those in need. However, Reynolds assures people that community resources remain available, encouraging individuals to take advantage of the support offered by organizations like FCA and beyond.
Dr. Jeffrey Reynolds speaking with Jihoon Kim, Deputy Secretary for Human Services & Mental Hygiene from the Office of Governor Kathy Hochul, Dr. Ann Marie Sullivan, NYS Office of Mental Health Commissioner, Martha Carlin, Director, OMH’s Long Island Field Office, and Brian MatontiPeterson, Regional Coordinator from NYS OASAS , at THRIVE Nassau about FCA’s Addiction Prevention, Treatment, and Recovery Services.
“We historically have forced people to jump through all sorts of hoops to get help for mental health conditions and substance use disorders,” Reynolds said. “Something moving forward that does include those traditional models of service delivery, coming to a clinic and you know, getting in your car and driving through here and that kind of thing. That’s probably important, but so are some of the other options.”
O’Hagan is actively involved in various organizations
Continued
dents to grow.”
O’Hagan added that the board is working with local colleges and universities to provide a variety of programs to Baldwin students “that reach outside the school district boundaries.”
She also mentioned that she is looking forward to introducing new, innovative courses to the school district and programs that are “a little bit different and exciting for the kids.”
O’Hagan, a huge proponent of improving educational programming, was recently presented with the National School Development Council’s Leadership Award. The award recognizes outstanding leadership and efforts to establish cooperative relationships to improve educational programs for students in the nation’s schools. O’Hagan has been an advocate for public education and an essential partner in the success of the Baldwin School District for nearly three decades.
O’Hagan has also served in the Nassau-Suffolk School Boards Association, as president, vice president, secretary and treasurer. In addition, she is a member of the New York State School Boards Association’s state legislative network and commissioner’s advisory council. She has been involved with the board’s

State Issues Conference, Federal Relations Network, and Commissioner’s Advisory Council.
O’Hagan has also served on the Nassau School and Municipal Shared Savings Initiative, the Long Island Regional Planning Council, and the Legislative Committee for the Nassau Council of School Superintendents, and she has also been co-chair of the Long Island Educational Coalition since 2015.
his happened to be a year when I was available, and everybody kind of felt I was in a better position to take on the extra work.In 2019, O’Hagan was the recipient of the state board’s most prestigious accolade, the Everett R. Dyer Award for Distinguished School Board Service. Additionally, she has been recognized with the state board’s Board Lifetime Achievement Award, Nassau County Women of Distinction Award, and the Scope Award for Community Service.
Prior to serving on the board, O’Hagan spent time on the Human Relations Advisory Council and the Baldwin Educational Assembly. She holds a B.A. in secondary English education from SUNY Oneonta.

When she’s not attending to school board matters, she said she loves to travel and read.
Courtesy Mary Furcht
Learning doesn’t have to end at a certain age—it can be a lifelong pursuit. Molloy University empowers learners of all ages by offering high-quality, flexible and adaptable programs to serve and meet the needs of Long Islanders through two outstanding programs: The Molloy Institute for Lifelong Learning (MILL) which was established in 1992 and the new Sister Mary Celeste Lecture Series. In both programs you learn for the fun of learning in a relaxed environment without assignments, exams or grades.
The MILL program is a membership-based program. Most members are retirees, however, not everyone is retired, nor is this a requisite for membership. All ages are welcome, men and women, singles or couples, as long as there is a willingness to participate in learning and to maintain a rigorous mind. The programs meet in-person one day week during the day: Tuesdays or Fridays in Rockville Centre and Wednesdays in Amityville. Membership is valid from September 1 to August 31 each year and lectures usually start mid-September and runs until mid-June.
The Sister Mary Celeste Lecture Series offers individual courses in a variety of areas, offered in-person during the day for one or more sessions in Rockville Centre. Topics may include, current events, music, art, literature, history, finance, heath, philosophy, technology and more. Whether you’re interested in dabbling in a new hobby or just trying to keep up with technology, there’s a class out there for you.
Multivitamins and Older Adults

About one-third of Americans 60 and older take multivitamins. Perhaps the remaining twothirds should as well. According to a major new study, the second of its kind to reach the same conclusion, taking multivitamins over age sixty delays the onset of memory loss by about 3 years.
The study used a commonly available multivitamin, Centrum Silver, which contains vitamins D, A, B12, thiamine, riboflavin, manganese and other substances, although it was noted that any high-quality multivitamin would do just as well.
A Washington Post article (5/24/23) about these findings quotes JoAnn Manson of Harvard Medical School “Older adults are very concerned about preserving cognition and memory, so this is a very important finding. They are looking for safe and effective prevention strategies. The fact that two separate studies came to similar conclusions is remarkable.”
Other experts cited were Andrew Budson, Professor of Neurology at Boston University “This study is groundbreaking. Low levels of
vitamins B1 -- also known as thiamine -- B12 and D are associated with cognitive decline. That a simple multivitamin can slow cognitive decline while they are aging normally is quite exciting, as it is something almost everyone can do.”
The reasons that multivitamin “therapy” is so effective is explained by Paul E. Schultz, Professor Neurology at McGovern Medical School, Houston -- the brain requires a lot of vitamins and minerals to function properly. While the goal is to maintain nutrition through a healthy and balanced diet, as we age our bodies may be unable to absorb sufficient levels of the essential elements. In addition, some medications interfere with the absorption of nutrients. Schulz states “Think of a complicated engine that requires lots of specialty parts and needs them all. We regularly see people who are deficient in nutrients come in with cognitive impairment.”

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11 BALDWIN HERALD — July 27, 2023
Exploring Britain’s Long Island occupation
By LARA MURRAY-STERZEL Intern
American history is a long and complicated tale to tell. But there are still those venturing into the past to uncover stories never told during the making of our country.
“Chronicles of the British Occupation of Long Island” is a new book by David M. Griffin, taking readers back in time to the Revolutionary War when people lived in fear of the British’s brutal power, while slowly gaining a patriotic desire for freedom.

Griffin is an independent researcher and author who’s always been driven to the history of the Revolutionary War, especially in New York region. When he completed his first book, “Lost British Forts of Long Island” in 2017, Griffin reached out to The History Press, a publishing company known for its collection of history books in communities on Long Island and elsewhere.
He was put in touch with acquisitions editor, Banks Smithers, and the two have worked together ever since. When Griffin came to Smithers about the idea of focusing on the British occupation of this part of the world, the two began shaping his current idea into the story it is today.
The novel follows a narrative story between 1776 and 1783, giving a human aspect to what it was like to experience life on Long Island during British rule. Griffin wanted to explore the British movement and American spy activity through various sources from the time.
To do this, he read historical books and even stud-
ied a period diary, which is referenced in the book about what was discussed, heard and spoken when the British loomed over Long Island.
“It’s very hard to write about the time because everything was very secretive,” Griffin said. “So, stories and the order of things that were happening on the island were hidden. You have to rely on a lot of different accounts from different writers.”
He provided images in his novel — some of which included maps the British used as a part of their network — as well as photographs of historical houses where British soldiers were sheltered as part of quartering laws. Griffin thought by showing these, it would create a certain historical depth for the reader.
After a year of writing, the book was published in July and is expected to arrive soon at Long Island bookstores. The History Press hopes to schedule book events once the stores have received the novel.

Griffin sees his book as rather dark because of the topics it covers, focused on how the power over land divided people. Even when Colonists endured the unpredictable effects that led up to — and included — the Revolutionary War, Griffin was shocked at how long the British stayed on Long Island and what they did.
Which made his research all that more compelling.
“I learned a lot more about the conditions of dayto-day life under martial law in the book,” Smithers said. “David paints a harrowing picture of occupied Long Island — something entirely unfamiliar to today’s Long Islanders — and thus exceedingly interesting.”
Mood lighting
Courtesy David M. Griffin David M. Griffin’s book — ‘Chronicles of the British Occupation of Long Island’ — is expected to hit bookstores soon, especially on Long Island.STEPPING OUT
Always in-tune with
Penn & Teller

n its first incarnation since the pandemic, the 24th Annual Long Island Jolson Festival is ready to delight loyal fans once again. The festival’s latest edition, on Saturday, Aug. 12, will bring together devotees for a full day of nostalgia and music, celebrating the talent of Al Jolson — the performer bestowed with the moniker “world’s greatest entertainer.”
STEPPING OUT
Creative advocacy




































































































































Jan Hernstat — the International Al Jolson Society’s president, who has helmed the festival since its beginning — is excited to remember the icon, who was a pioneer in many genres in the ‘20s, including music, film (“The Jazz Singer”), and theatre “Hold on to Your Hats”). When Hernstat began the festival many years ago, it was simply because he wanted a platform to show his appreciation for Jolson. It quickly turned into something else.


“It has been fun over the years to bring Jolson to people who don’t normally get to see him,” Hernstat says. “When I started doing this, people came to me and said something which I didn’t really understand: ‘Thank you for doing this service to bring this kind of entertainment that we don’t get to see anymore.’ It was just something that I wanted to do, and as a byproduct, I was making people happy. That’s a good feeling.”
It will be next to impossible not to smile at this year’s festival, which will include a performance from mainstay Tony Babino, who has been treating festivalgoers to the vocal stylings of Jolson for years. He is joined by “Mr. Tin Pan Alley,” Richard Halpern, who is participating in the event — at Lambrou’s in Island Park — all the way from California.
Hernstat explains that Halpern brings a unique set of skills to his Jolson interpretation.
By Karen Bloom“A lot of people know Jolson from ‘The Jolson Story’ forward,” he says. “He did 20 songs in that film. The majority of people alive today only know those songs and the style in which he did it, which is what Tony emulates. But Richard does Jolson from the ‘20s and ‘30s, the ‘78 (RPM) Jolson,’ as I like to call it. People will get a little contrast, because with Richard, you’re going to get more of the early Jolson and with Tony more of the later Jolson. It’s going to be great.”



• Tickets are $43.95, which includes entertainment and meals; tickets for show only are $29.95
• Information and tickets available at Jolson.org or call Jan Hernstat at (516) 678-3524.
All Stand,” Hofstra University Museum of Art’s new exhibition, examines power of the arts in society.
Pat McGann is quickly rising as one of the sharpest stand-ups on the comedy scene. A relative latecomer to comedy, he began doing standup at 31 after realizing he was not
He hustled his way to become the house emcee at Zanies Chicago, where he distinguished himself as crowd. A husband and father of three young children, McGann’s appeal stems from his quick wit
and marriage. In 2017, McGann began touring as the opening act for Sebastian Maniscalco, moving
The famed duo steps away from their Las Vegas residency to bring their act on tour, appearing on the Tilles Center stage. Penn & Teller’s brand of awe-inspiring illusions mixed with buddy-comedy shtick has kept the duo at the very top of the magic profession for the past 45 years. Their trademark is the updating of worn out or archaic routines, such as bullet catching, or their recent adaptation of the classic bag escape trick (their version involved a trash bag and lots of helium). From humble beginnings busking on the streets of Philadelphia to acclaimed sold–out runs on Broadway to the longest running and one of the most-beloved resident headline acts in Vegas history, magic’s legendary duo continues to defy labels — and at times physics and good taste — by redefining the genre of magic and inventing their own very distinct niche in comedy. Constantly evolving and refining their unique take on illusion, the pair’s slight of hand always amazes, whether it’s a fresh take on an old ‘trick’ or something altogether new.
Friday and Saturday, July 28, 8 p.m. LIU Post campus, 720 Northern Blvd., Brookville. Tickets are $94, $84, $58, $48; available at TillesCenter.org or (516) 299-3100.
Kevin James


• Lambrou’s Catering Hall, 4073 Austin Blvd., Island Park
Alexandra Giordano — the museum’s assistant director of exhibition and exhibit underscores artists’ civic responsibility and influence. the vital role that artists have in activating democratic values that and freedom, encouraging civic engagement, and cultivating unity,” “Artists often lead the charge and expose truths that may otherwise be artists in this exhibition take a stand and call out injustices through their art issues such as immigration, gender, reproductive rights, mass incarceration, racial bias, gun violence, and promises unfulfilled. They all combine the making service that has a grassroots approach in the hope of mobilizing their the nation to ignite movement, create awareness, and inspire others to them.” which runs through July 28, is in conjunction with Hofstra’s conference on the Barack Obama presidency coming up in April. interested in the idea that the artist has a civic responsibility,” says Karen Albert. “The initial idea for this exhibition was inspired by Administration White House briefing that took place on May 12, 2009, 60 artists and creative organizers met with administration officials to collective power of the arts to build community, create change, and chart national recovery in the areas of social justice, civic participation and unlike other recent exhibits that showcased the museum’s collection, Giordano reached out to contemporary artists who loaned selected works. Some 36 pieces are on view — representing Emma Amos, Molly Crabapple and the Equal Justice Initiative, Miguel
Also new this year is an appearance by comedian Jeff Greenberg, a longtime society member known for his humorous act, frequently performing near his New Jersey home. The comedy doesn’t end there. Bob Greenberg (no relation) will be tickling the funny bone as characters from oldies acts, such as Oliver Hardy, Ralph Kramden and Lou Costello. Additionally, fans will have the opportunity to meet Brian Gari, grandson of the late performer Eddie Cantor, Jolson’s showbiz contemporary, and can check out a slew of memorabilia from Jolson’s era.
Hernstat is intent on keeping Jolson’s legacy front and center in the public eye.
“He was the first true superstar. In fact, the word ‘superstar’ was not even coined yet,” he says. “He was an international star at a time when there was no real media to promote what he did. Now all you have to do is go on social media and everyone knows you all over the world. When Jolson first started out, there weren’t talking movies, there’s wasn’t radio and TV. For somebody to be as big as he was worldwide, it really talks about your talent. It is a wonderful experience to celebrate his talent, his singing, and his voice.”



When Hernstat reflects on years past, he fondly remembers welcoming entertainers to his gathering, such as Sheldon Harnick (“Fiddler on the Roof” lyricist and songwriter), radio and television superstar Margaret Whiting, and comedian Soupy Sales.

“I don’t want this festival to die,” Hernstat says. “There’s still people out there that love Jolson. I always tell people, ‘We’re not looking to convert you to become a Jolson fan, we just want to find the ones out there who are and let them know that they have this outlet for their enjoyment.’”
Garden. McGann’s relatively short, but impressive resume, includes Montreal’s famed Just For Laughs
Great American Comedy Festival,

Saturday, Feb. 11, 8 p.m. $40, $35, $30, $25. The Paramount, 370 New York Ave., Huntington. (800) 745-3000 or Ticketmaster.com or ParamountNY.com.
Yarn/Wire
Now in its 18th year, Adelphi University’s ‘new music’ series welcomes Yarn/Wire. The intrepid New York-based piano-percussion quartet has forged a singular path with

The ‘King of Queens,’ ‘Mall Cop,’ ‘Kevin Can Wait,’ and Larry (of ‘I Now Pronounce You Chuck and Larry’) — Kevin James wears many hats. Catch his comedic brilliance when he returns to his Long Island roots with his Irregardless Tour. Young Kevin was a promising college football fullback until the acting bug bit him. After spending his junior summer with the local community theatre, he realized getting laughs was a bigger rush than stopping running backs from scoring a first down. James took to the comedy circuit where he soon made a name for himself, receiving the deal that every struggling comedian dreams of: The chance to develop and star in his own sitcom. The result was ‘King of Queens,’ and the rest is history. Now, he’s back on the stage with his everyman comedy and warm deadpan delivery. He’ll regale everyone with his quietly hilarious observations on life, fatherhood, and the simple absurdities of the world.
Saturday, July 29, 7:30 p.m. $99.50, $79.50, $69.50, $49.50. The Paramount, 370 New York Ave., Huntington. Ticketmaster.com or ParamountNY.com.
change the world? It’s a question been at the focus of our collective for centuries. Now as society the complexities of modern life, path for social change is at the of artistic expression.
The longtime festival is a lively tribute to the ‘World’s Greatest Entertainer’
THE Your Neighborhood
























Aug. 4























Doo-Wop Oldies Spectacular



















































Revisit the golden oldies with Peter Lemongello Jr. in “An Evening To Remember,” with The Fabulous Acchords, The Tribunes and Teresa McClean, Friday, Aug. 4, 7:30 p.m. With their polished vocal skills and dynamic stage presence, these artists deliver a night of unforgettable entertainment in an energetic show that is pure nostalgia, filled with unforgettable tunes. Headliner Peter Lemongello Jr., is acclaimed as the most explosive and exciting doo-wop performer to appear on the scene in 40 years. The son of singer Peter Lemongello, Peter Jr. has appeared on “American Idol” and performed with The Four Tops, The Temptations, Chubby Checker and Lloyd Price, among others. He’s joined by acapella group The Tribunes, renowned for their authentic New York-bred street-corner harmonies, and The Fabulous Acchords, known for their impeccable harmonies, who captivate audiences with their blend of classic and contemporary songs, spanning genres and eras. The concert, produced by Gene DiNapoli, also features a special appearance by Teresa McClean, who takes everyone on an enthusiastic musical journey with her signature vocals and lush orchestration. $49, $39, $29; available at LandmarkOnMainStreet.org. or (917) 567-5842. Jeanne Rimsky Theater at Landmark on Main Street, 232 Main St., Port Washington.

On exhibit


View the landmark exhibition “Modigliani and the Modern Portrait,” at Nassau County Museum of Art. Devoted to the way that Modigliani powerfully re-defined the art of portraiture, the show includes his masterworks along with paintings and drawings by his Parisian contemporaries (Picasso, van Dongen, Laurencin). Modigliani’s enduring influence on artists even in our own time is shown in a selection of Contemporary paintings by such important figures as David Hockney, Eric Fischl, Elizabeth Peyton and others. The exhibition is being curated by Dr. Kenneth Wayne, founder of The Modigliani Project, which authenticates paintings and drawings (two of the works in the show have been recently approved by the committee). Through Nov. 5. Nassau County Museum of Art, 1 Museum Dr., Roslyn Harbor. (516) 484-9337 or NassauMuseum.org.
July 28










































































































































































































































































































































































Summer tunes




















Get in the Motown groove with Dr. K’s Motown Revue, at Eisenhower Park, Friday, July 28, 8 p.m. The band’s dynamic renditions of those great tunes are performed with passion and conviction in true Motown style. With special guest Chicken Head. Harry Chapin Lakeside Theatre, Eisenhower Park, East Meadow. For information, visit NassauCountyNY.gov.





















































































Baldwin Car Night
Stop by Atlantic Avenue for Car Night at Fireman’s Field, every Thursday, 5-9 p.m. With a DJ, hotrods and classics, antique, and trucks. $3 donation per carload for the Firefighter Stephen Barry Memorial Scholarship fund. Enjoy an evening of cars, tunes, and conversation Sponsored by Hook & Ladder Company Two, Baldwin Fire Department. For more information, call (516) 223-6858.


Hot Diggity Dog
It’s barbecue season and Long Island Children’s Museum is feeling in the spirit, Kids can celebrate National Hot Dog Month by making a customized hot dog craft to bring home, at the drop-in program, Sunday, July 30, 1-3 p.m. Long Island Children’s Museum, Museum Row, Garden City. (516) 224-5800 or LICM.org.
Aug. 17
Write on: College essay workshop

Not sure how to get started on your college essay? The Hofstra University Admission Office is offering a virtual workshop to help high school students learn the skills to tell their story in a way that helps them stand out. The final workshop, Thursday, Aug. 17, 4-5 p.m., is free and open to the public, but advance registration is required. Hear from Hofstra Admission counselors about how to brainstorm topics, and compose a thoughtful essay that shows your personality, talents and interests. For more information about Hofstra Admission’s other virtual summer workshops, go to Admission.Hofstra.edu/portal/ virtual_admission_webinars. To schedule a summer in-person visit go to: Hofstra.edu/visit.
Breastfeeding Support Group
Mercy Hospital offers a peer to peer meeting for breastfeeding support and resources, facilitated by a certified breastfeeding counselor, every Thursday, 10:30 a.m.–11:30 a.m. Bring your baby (from newborn to 1 year) to the informal group setting. All new moms are welcome, regardless of delivering hospital. Registration required. Call breastfeeding counselor, Gabriella Gennaro, at (516) 7052434 to secure you and your baby’s spot. Mercy Hospital, St. Anne’s Building, 1000 North Village Ave., Rockville Centre. For information visit CHSLI.org.
Food Truck Fridays
Stop by Baldwin Community
Garden, Friday, Aug. 4, 5:30-8 p.m. Enjoy varied foods and entertainment. Participating food trucks include Waffle Chic, Kool Kat, Amped Panadas, NY Sausage, Kannoli King, and The Big Cheese. First Friday monthly. 1980 Grand Ave For more information, call (516) 274-9008.

Having an event?
Storybook Stroll
Bring the kids to Old Westbury Gardens for a storybook adventure, Saturday, Aug. 5, 10:3011:30 a.m. Stroll the gardens and open your ears to Kirsten Hall’s modern tale “The Honeybe.” Later create a unique take home craft. For ages 3-5. Old Westbury Gardens, 71 Old Westbury Rd., Old Westbury. For information visit OldWestburyGardens. org or contact (516) 3330048.

Items on The Scene page are listed free of charge. The Herald welcomes listings of upcoming events, community meetings and items of public interest. All submissions should include date, time and location of the event, cost, and a contact name and phone number. Submissions can be emailed to thescene@liherald.com.


Westbury House Tour
For many years visitors to Westbury House at Old Westbury Gardens asked what was beyond the first floor corridor. Now go beyond the door and discover “secrets of the service wing,” during a 60-minute guided tour, Friday, July 28, noon; Sunday, July 30, 3 p.m.; Monday, July 31, noon; Sunday, Aug. 6, 1:30 p.m. Be introduced to the intensive labor required to create the lifestyle experienced by the Phipps family and their guests; tour the many rooms that were “behind the scenes” to create the formal dining experiences of early 20th century. Go along the corridors to the butler’s pantry and silver cleaning room then descend the 17 steps to the kitchen, scullery, and wine storage rooms located on the ground floor. Reservations required. 71 Old Westbury Rd., Old Westbury. For information contact (516) 333-0048 or visit OldWestburyGardens.org.

Art talk
Sept. 7
Grab your lunch and join Nassau County Museum of Art Docent Riva Ettus for her popular “Brown Bag Lecture,” now back on-site at Nassau County Museum of Art, Thursday, Sept. 7, 1 p.m. Enjoy an in-depth presentation on the current exhibition “Modigliani and the Modern Portrait.” Participants are invited to ask questions at the end of the program and to join the 2 p.m. public tour of the exhibit. Also Oct. 19. 1 Museum Dr., Roslyn Harbor. (516) 484-9337 or NassauMuseum.org.
National Night Out 2023
Join Senator Kevin Thomas and Nassau County Legislator Debra Mulé for National Night Out 2023 at Baldwin Senior High School, Tuesday, Aug. 1, at 6:30 p.m., in partnership with the Nassau County Police Department, the Baldwin Fire Department, and the Nassau County PBA. With demonstrations, music, games, vendors, food, and more. National Night Out is a yearly event that enhances the relationship between neighbors and law enforcement while bringing back a true sense of community. 841 Ethel T. Kloberg Drive. For more information, call (516) 571-6205.
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3041
516-315-1218
516-315-1218
Mulé expresses gratitude for sinkhole repairs
expedite the delivery of billions of dollars in federal aid that has been earmarked to the state in the Infrastructure Investment and Jobs Act.
“No part of our county or our region is immune from infrastructure failures like the ones we have experienced during the last month,” Mulé said.
“When considered alongside the growing hazards posed by the impacts of climate change, these looming threats behoove us to act now. We must take decisive action to protect our environmental assets and secure the health and safety of all Nassau County residents by averting future catastrophes such as the ones that the residents of Baldwin and Lido Beach have endured.”
In an open letter to the Baldwin community on July 17, Mulé expressed her gratitude to Nassau County officials for their “swift attention” to the Baldwin sinkhole. She also said she was thankful for the workers who toiled in extreme heat to complete these repairs, and to the Baldwin residents for their patience throughout these repairs.


“Curb-to-curb roadway resurfacing is anticipated for Lorenz Avenue during the week of July 24 to 28, 2023 as the final phase of the emergency response work,” Mulé said in her letter. “Officials anticipate that the roadway resurfacing along Lorenz Avenue will require approximately three days to complete, with work being
performed from 9 a.m. to 3:30 p.m. on consecutive weekdays.”

Mulé added that the section of sewer main that was cracked on Grand Avenue was repaired on July 13. The structural pipe liner was installed within the primary sewer main, which reinforced the


sewer line to prevent it from cracking again. She also said that driveway access to residents along the south side of Lorenz Avenue was restored last Wednesday, and Grand Avenue was fully reopened last Saturday.

“This incident was truly a wake-up call
■ Sink-hole opens on Grand Avenue on June 27

■ Section of compromised sewer main was repaired on July 13
■ Driveway access to residents along the south side of Lorenz was restored on July 19


■ Roadway restoration and the reopening of Grand Avenue occurred last Saturday
■ Curb-to-curb roadway resurfacing for Lorenz Avenue to take place during the week of July 24-28
for all of us, and I am committed to focusing on rebuilding and reinforcing Nassau County’s critical infrastructure,” Mulé said in her open letter.

“As we look ahead to the 2024 capital plan, I will make resources for road, sewer and water infrastructure my top priority.”

Town officials congratulate Baldwin sports champions






Hempstead Town Deputy Supervisor Dorothy Goosby, Councilwoman Laura Ryder, Town Clerk Kate Murray, and Receiver of Taxes Jeanine Driscoll congratulated the Baldwin High School Boys Basketball Team on winning the 2023 Nassau County AA Section VIII Championship.

They also congratulated the Baldwin High School Girls Track Team on winning the 2023 New York State Indoor
Track and Field Championship in the 4x200-Meter Relay, and the Baldwin High School Girls Basketball Team on winning the 2023 Long Island AA Championship. Also attended were coach Darius Burton, Director of Athletics Ty Scarlett, Principal Neil Testa, Superintendent of Schools Shari Camhi, and Nassau County Legislator Debra Mulé.
Courtesy Town of Hempstead Officials celebrate the Baldwin High School Boys Basketball champions.LEGAL NOTICE
NOTICE OF SALE
SUPREME COURT
COUNTY OF NASSAU, U.S. BANK NATIONAL ASSOCIATION, NOT IN ITS INDIVIDUAL CAPACITY BUT SOLELY AS TRUSTEE FOR RMAC TRUST, SERIES 2016-CTT, Plaintiff, vs. VICKIE REINA, ET AL., Defendant(s).
Pursuant to a Judgment of Foreclosure and Sale duly entered on September 24, 2019, I, the undersigned Referee will sell at public auction on the front steps on the north side of the Nassau County Supreme Court, 100 Supreme Court Drive, Mineola, NY 11501 on August 8, 2023 at 2:30 p.m., premises known as 3186 Grand Avenue, Baldwin, NY 11510. All that certain plot, piece or parcel of land, with the buildings and improvements thereon erected, situate, lying and being at Baldwin, Town of Hempstead, County of Nassau and State of New York, Section 54., Block 566 and Lot 37. Approximate amount of judgment is $702,079.43 plus interest and costs. Premises will be sold subject to provisions of filed Judgment Index # 1788/2017. This foreclosure sale will be held on the north side steps of the Courthouse, rain or shine. COVID-19 safety protocols will be followed at the foreclosure sale. If proper social distancing cannot be maintained or there are other health or safety concerns, the Court Appointed Referee will cancel the sale. No cash will be accepted.
Ellen Savino, Esq., Referee Friedman Vartolo LLP, 85 Broad Street, Suite 501, New York, New York 10004, Attorneys for Plaintiff. Firm File No.:
180341-1
140460
LEGAL NOTICE
REFEREE’S NOTICE OF SALE IN FORECLOSURE
SUPREME COURTCOUNTY OF NASSAU
NATIONSTAR
MORTGAGE LLC, Plaintiff - against - FADJAH SANON-JULES A/K/A
FADJAH SANON JULES, et al Defendant(s).
Pursuant to a Judgment of Foreclosure and Sale entered on December 6, 2022. I, the undersigned Referee will sell at public auction on the North Side steps of the Nassau County Supreme Court located at 100 Supreme Court Drive, Mineola, N.Y. 11501 “Rain or Shine” on the 15th day of August, 2023 at 2:00 PM. All that certain plot, piece or parcel of land, with the buildings and improvements thereon erected, situate, lying and being in the Town of Hempstead, County of Nassau and State of New York.
Premises known as 1245 Lynne Street, Baldwin, NY 11510.
(Section: 36, Block: 538, Lot: 2)
Approximate amount of lien $1,063,723.35 plus interest and costs.
Premises will be sold subject to provisions of filed judgment and terms of sale.


Index No. 007600/2015. Mark S. Ricciardi, Esq., Referee.
McCalla Raymer Leibert Pierce, LLC
Attorney(s) for Plaintiff 420 Lexington Avenue, Suite 840 New York, NY 10170
Tel. 347/286-7409
For sale information, please visit Auction.com at www.Auction.com or call (800) 280-2832
Dated: June 13, 2023
During the COVID-19 health emergency, bidders are required to comply with all governmental health requirements in effect at the time of sale including but not limited to, wearing face coverings and maintaining social distancing (at least 6-feet apart) during the auction, while tendering deposit and at any subsequent closing. Bidders are also required to comply with the Foreclosure Auction Rules and COVID-19 Health Emergency Rules issued by the Supreme Court of this County in addition to the conditions set forth in the Terms of Sale.
140636
LEGAL NOTICE
NOTICE OF SALE SUPREME COURT COUNTY OF NASSAU, WELLS FARGO BANK, N.A., Plaintiff, vs. JOHN TAYLOR A/K/A JOHN W. TAYLOR III, INDIVIDUALLY AND AS EXECUTOR OF THE ESTATE OF JOMARCEL
TAYLOR A/K/A JOMARCEL M. TAYLOR, ET AL., Defendant(s).
Pursuant to an Amended Order Confirming Referee Report and Judgment of Foreclosure and Sale duly entered on May 27, 2022 and a Short Form Order duly entered on July 20, 2022, I, the undersigned Referee will sell at public auction on the front steps on the north side of the Nassau County Supreme Court, 100 Supreme Court Drive, Mineola, NY 11501 on August 15, 2023 at 2:00 p.m., premises known as 59 Woodland Estates Drive, Baldwin, NY 11510. All that certain plot, piece or parcel of land, with the buildings and improvements thereon erected, situate, lying and being in the Village of Baldwin, Town of Hempstead, County of Nassau and State of New York, Section 36, Block 547 and Lot 68.
Approximate amount of judgment is $379,201.26 plus interest and costs.
Premises will be sold subject to provisions of filed Judgment Index # 007762/2013. This
foreclosure sale will be held on the north side steps of the Courthouse, rain or shine. COVID-19 safety protocols will be followed at the foreclosure sale. If proper social distancing cannot be maintained or there are other health or safety concerns, the Court Appointed Referee will cancel the sale.
Charles J. Casolaro, Esq., Referee Friedman Vartolo LLP, 85 Broad Street, Suite 501, New York, New York 10004, Attorneys for Plaintiff. Firm File No. 212719-1 140665
LEGAL NOTICE
NOTICE OF SERVICE OF PROCESS BY PUBLICATION IN THE GENERAL COURT OF JUSTICE DISTRICT COURT DIVISION
FILE #23-JA-10
COUNTY OF GRANVILLE STATE OF NORTH CAROLINA
IN RE: M.J. (FILE #23-JA-10)
TO: Kearra Shantelle Josephs as to your male child born 01/17/2012 (23-JA-10).
TAKE NOTICE that pleadings seeking relief against you by the Granville County Department of Social Services have been filed in the above-entitled action. The nature of the relief sought is adjudication as to your male child born 01/17/2012 (23-JA-10), to be a dependent juvenile. You are required to make defense to such pleadings not later than August 29, 2023 and upon your failure to do so; the party seeking relief against you will apply to the court for the relief set out hereinabove.
This the 11th day of July, 2023
Gerald T. Koinis HICKS & KOINIS, PLLC Attorney for GCDSS
P. O. Box 247 111 Gilliam Street Oxford, NC 27565 (919) 693 8161 140715
LEGAL NOTICE BOARD OF EDUCATION
BALDWIN UNION FREE SCHOOL DISTRICT
SPECIFICATIONS FOR PUPIL TRANSPORTATION
Section 1 ADVERTISEMENT
The Board of Education Of The Baldwin Union Free School District. County of Nassau, hereafter invites
The Submission of Sealed Bids for the SouthWest Quadrant Consortium
PUPIL TRANSPORTATION
Monday, August 7, 2023
At 9:30 A.M. At the office Of the Board of Education Baldwin Union Free School District, Baldwin N.Y. 11510
Between the hours of 8:30 AM and 3:30 PM Weekdays. The Board of Education reserves the Right to reject any or all Bids, or to accept any bid Which is in the opinion of The Board of Education Will be in the best Interest of the School District Board of Education Baldwin Union Free School District.
By: Pamela Pratt District Clerk 140931
LEGAL NOTICE
STATE OF NEW YORK SUPREME COURT: COUNTY OF NASSAU U.S. BANK NATIONAL ASSOCIATION, AS TRUSTEE FOR CREDIT SUISSE FIRST BOSTON MORTGAGE SECURITIES CORP., CSMC MORTGAGE-BACKED PASS-THROUGH CERTIFICATES, SERIES 2006-7, Plaintiff,
Jason Brandle from Baldwin, N.Y., and assigned to the Operations Company, 42nd Infantry Division Headquarters and Headquarters Battalion, received a promotion on December 21, 2022 to the rank of major. Army National Guard promotions are based on a soldier’s overall performance, demonstrated leadership abilities, professionalism, and future development potential. These promotions recognize the best qualified Soldiers for a career in the New York Army National Guard.
Army National Guard Citizen Soldiers who serve the state and nation are eligible for monthly pay, educational benefits, travel across the globe, technical and leadership training, health and dental insurance and contributions towards retirement programs similar to a 401(k).
For more information about the New York Army National Guard, visit DMNA. NY.Gov or 1800GoGuard.com
The New York National Guard is the state’s executive agency responsible to the Governor for managing New York’s Military Forces, which consists of nearly 20,000 members of the New York Army National Guard, the New York Air National Guard, the New York Naval Militia and the New York Guard.
News briefs
v. HOREB TRUJILLO, ET AL. Defendants.
NOTICE OF SALE IN FORECLOSURE
PLEASE TAKE NOTICE THAT
In pursuance of a Judgment of Foreclosure and Sale entered in the Office of the County Clerk of Nassau County on JFS December 12, 2022, I, Irene Parrino, Esq. the Referee named in said Judgment, will sell in one parcel at public auction on August 29, 2023 at Nassau County Supreme Court, 100 Supreme Ct. Dr. North Side Steps, County of Nassau, State of New York, 11501 at 3:30 PM the premises described as follows: 2690 Hanson Place Baldwin, NY 11510 Section 54 Block 282 Lot 378
All that certain plot, piece or parcel of land, with the buildings and improvements thereon erected, situated, lying and being in the Town of Hempstead, County of Nassau and State of New York.
The premises are sold subject to the provisions of the filed judgment, Index No. 011030/2011 in the amount of $713,147.52 plus interest and costs.
The aforementioned auction will be conducted in accordance with the Court System’s COVID-19 mitigation protocols and as such all persons must comply with social distancing, wearing masks and screening practices in effect at the time of this foreclosure sale.
Woods Oviatt Gilman LLP Attorneys for Plaintiff 500 Bausch & Lomb Place Rochester, NY 14604 855-227-5072
Tel.: 855-227-5072
140916
Hempstead Town Clerk Kate Murray officiates wedding last month
HempsteadTown Clerk Kate Murray officiated the wedding of Baldwin residents Gerald Ott and Ahaila Varma on June 27 at Hempstead Town Hall. Residents interested in obtaining their marriage license and/or scheduling a wedding ceremony should call the Office of the Town Clerk at (516) 812-3014 or visit HempsteadNY.Gov/ Marriage.
— Ben Fiebert
Hempstead, County of Nassau and State of New York, Section 54, Block 414 and Lot PUBLIC AND LEGAL NOTICES… Printed in this publication can be found online. To search by publication name, go to: www.newyorkpublicnotices.com
LEGAL NOTICE NOTICE OF SALE SUPREME COURT COUNTY OF NASSAU, U.S. BANK TRUST NATIONAL ASSOCIATION, NOT IN ITS INDIVIDUAL CAPACITY, BUT SOLELY AS TRUSTEE OF THE TRUMAN 2021 SC9 TITLE TRUST, Plaintiff, vs. KIRSTEN SAVAGE, ET. AL., Defendant(s).
Pursuant to an Order Confirming Referee Report and Judgment of Foreclosure and Sale duly entered on June 12, 2023,
Courtesy Town of Hempstead Hempstead Town Clerk Kate Murray (left) officiated the wedding of Baldwin residents Gerald Ott and Ahaila Varma.

filed Judgment 19 BALDWIN HERALD — July 27, 2023
# 610443/2018.
— Ben Fiebert
New
Help Wanted RECEPTIONIST P/T
Busy Cedarhurst Office
Sundays & Some Week Days
Answering Phones, Filing, And Scheduling Appointments Must Be Computer Literate Call 516-374-1010

THE FRIEDBERG JCC Before/After School Program is seeking passionate and hardworking high school/ college counselors. Before Care hours: 7am-9am. After School hours: 2:45PM-6PM. If interested, send your resume to Program Director Toni Corchado: TCorchado@friedbergjcc.org or call 516-634-4179

Child/Eldercare/Help Wanted
NANNY NEEDED EXPERIENCED
Live-In Or Live-Out
Monday - Friday
English/Spanish Speaking Call 516-672-4040
Eldercare Offered
SANTA CRUZ SERAG Caregivers Provide The Best Male/ Female Caregivers In America. Certified HHA's, Professional. Experts In Dementia, Alzheimers, Parkinsons Cases. Call Gertrude 347-444-0960

Maintenance Mechanic Wanted for Residential Building




REAL ESTATE
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HomesHERALD
To place an ad call 516-569-4000 press 5 • To place an ad call 516-569-4000 press 5
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This truly beautiful renovated Cape Cod features a living room with a wood burning fireplace, a dining room and a brand new eat-in-kitchen with island. This home also boasts four bedrooms, two full baths, white oak floors, full basement and detached garage with a long and private driveway, off street parking for five to six cars, newer gas heat and hot water heater. You will also enjoy gas cooking, central air conditioning, all newer thermal pane windows, newer roof, private fenced yard and much more! Located on a quiet tree lined street; you can walk to everything including the LIRR station. $715,000
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How tall can houses be?
Q. A few homes in my neighborhood are much taller. What are the rules for how tall a house can be — like how many floors, and what is legal? I mostly see only two stories, but the new ones are at least three. Is this a new thing that you can build taller? Was it just traditional to only build two stories until now?
A. The thinking on allowed height has changed recently.
Hurricane Sandy’s flooding moved New York to promote house lifting in flood zones. Influence also came from the Federal Emergency Management Agency, which, in essence, is really a publicly funded insurance company, covering people in areas where regular home insurance companies avoid the risk of insuring.
Ask The Architect Monte Leeper

The incentive to lift or build higher is to avoid huge flood insurance cost increases — building above flood levels, with the lowest level only allowed to be for a garage and storage, not living space. By making the first livable floor higher, above the flood level, insurance rates are kept lower. People have shown me their rates went from $500 to $2,500 dollars a year, increasing annually since Sandy in 2012.
Gran/Wood EIK, Spac LR/DR with Vaulted Ceiling & Fpl, & Fam Rm. 2 Car Att Gar.Endless Possibilities!
SD#14 $1,349,000
246 Adams Rd, BA, Elegant & Stately 4200 Sq Ft CH Col on Beautiful Quiet St. 5 BR, 4.55 Bth. Sweeping Staircase. All Spacious Rooms with Top Quality Finishes. Amazing Fam Rm with Cathedral Ceiling Overlooking
1 Acre Resortlike Prop Featuring IG Gunite Pool, Patio & Tennis Ct. XL Fin Bsmt. Upper Level has Primary Ste w/ Dressing Rm & Bth Plus 3 BRs & 2
Bths. 2 Car Att Gar.Low Taxes! SD#20 REDUCED! $2,299,000
HEWLETT
1390 Broadway #102, BA, NEW! Move Right Into This Magnificent Newly
Renovated 2 BR, 2 Bth Coop in Prestigious Hewlett Townhouse.Open
Layout. NEW State of the Art Kitchen & Bths, HW Flrs, Windows, HVAC, Recessed LED Lights, Doors, W/D. Community Pool. Full Service 24 Hr


Doorman, Valet Pkg, Elevator, Priv Storage. Gar Pkg. Near Shops, Trans &
Houses of Worship $579,000
1534 Broadway #205, BA, Extra Large 2000 Sq Ft, 2 Bedroom (Originally

3 BR), 2 Bath Condo in Prestigious Jonathan Hall with Doorman & Elevator. Updtd Wood/Quartz Kit, LR & DR. Washer/Dryer in Unit.
Underground Pkg. Loads of Closets. Terrace Faces Back. Easy Ranch Style
Living BIG REDUCTION!! MOTIVATED SELLER! $579,000
WOO dMERE
504 Saddle Ridge Rd, BA, Move Right Into This Renovated 4 BR, 2 Bth

Split with Open Layout in Prime Location! Granite/Wood EIK Opens to Dining Room & Living Room. Lower Level Den. HW Flrs, Gas Heat, CAC.
Oversized Property! SD#14. Near All! REDUCED! $999,000
CE da RHURST
332B Peninsula Blvd, BA, Move Right Into This Updated 3 Br, 2.5 Bth
Coop Townhouse. LR, DR, Gran/Wood Kit
Some homes are much higher than codes and incentives intended, due to misinterpretation of reasons to build higher and misrepresentation in the review process. For example, a home’s first floor is no longer a first floor if it’s higher than 6 feet above the ground. Over 6 feet high, the floor level automatically becomes a second floor, meaning the next floor above is a third floor, which requires zoning board approval, interior sprinklers, escape terraces and wind strengthening. I have seen home plans misrepresented as being two stories by not correctly showing the floor level heights or describing a second floor as a first floor, the next floor as a second floor that is really a third floor — even where a fourth floor is shown as a mezzanine or roof level balcony.
There is a small country town in Tuscany, in central Italy, San Gimignano, that is famous for its skyline of towers that people built onto their homes during medieval times. As the story goes, one prominent homeowner built a tall tower to watch for potential attackers. His neighbor jealously built a tower a little higher, and, not to be outdone, several adjacent homeowners began building towers higher and higher.
History repeats itself. Thirty feet from the new design flood elevation, which may be 2 to 4 feet higher off the ground, could make the maximum roof height 34 to 35 feet in your town. The safety code intends to protect people from perishing in fires, so indoor sprinklers are part of the requirement Decisions to build higher have to take community safety and appearance into account, so height restrictions have been intended to make escape and rescue easier. Statistically, only 5 percent of occupants on a third floor survive a fire. That’s the reason for height restrictions, so taller homes require more safety features.
© 2023 Monte Leeper
Readers are encouraged to send questions to yourhousedr@aol.com, with “Herald question” in the subject line, or to Herald Homes, 2 Endo Blvd., Garden City, NY 11530, Attn: Monte Leeper, architect.



























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Is it time for Yankees and Mets fans to ask for a refund?
Regardless of the heat wave, I love summer, compared with the brutal wind blasts of December. I know that the summer climate doesn’t satisfy everyone, but the chance to breathe the warm air and be greeted with the bright sunshine is very comforting to me. Summer makes me happy, but I must confess to being very irritated by one subject. I refer to the Yankees and the Mets.
Once upon a time, during my very naïve years, I was told that money buys anything. I didn’t really believe that, because with the passage of time, I saw many instances in which money bought nothing. I know wealthy couples who are the most miserable people. I’ve watched companies flush with money fall apart due to mismanagement.
But I wonder how two great sports franchises, flush with cash, can perform so badly.
Being a lifelong Yankees fan, I will start with my gripes about them.
Media reports indicate that the current payroll of the team is around $280 million, which places them close to the top of the list of the big spenders.
With that kind of money and a fan base that pours millions of dollars into the club treasury, how can management justify the fact that their team is in last place in the American League East?
There’s no doubt that Aaron Judge’s toe injury has been a major setback. But there are many other players who take the field each day and do nothing to win or make the loyal fan base happy. If you follow them as I do, they look like a bunch of people who just show up to collect a paycheck and go home.
They are listless, bored and totally disconnected with the job of keeping baseball America’s so-called pastime.
If these players were street sweepers, I could understand their listlessness. Pushing a broom can be a very dull job. But when players are paid millions of dollars, the fans are entitled to watch a team that is energized and trying to succeed. Have you ever watched the Little League World
Series? It pays to tune in and watch kids yell and scream when a teammate gets a base hit. They hug a fellow player when he strikes out to encourage him to do better the next time he’s at the plate.
There are many big league examples of hunger for victory. The Toronto Blue Jays and the Tampa Bay Rays are good examples.
Their players come out to play with smiles on their faces and are determined to win. The lack of passion that the Yankees display is similar to what I observe about this year’s Mets team.
The Mets’ owner, Steve Cohen is a very wealthy man. He can buy just about anything he wants just by dialing his cellphone. He has invested billions in a team that has been called one of the best that money could buy. When he broke the bank to hire Justin Verlander and Max Scherzer, Mets fans were jumping for joy.
The rest of the lineup is All-Star quality, but the team could end up in fourth or worse in the NL East at season’s end.
When some team owners speak to
the sportswriters, they sound like the kid who claims the dog ate his homework. They moan about injuries and claim that it will be just a matter of time before their players catch fire. They’re afraid to complain about their players for fear of upsetting them. They seem to forget about the dollars they’re shelling out to those employees.
Many of us longtime Yankees fans wish George Steinbrenner was still alive. When he was, and Yankees players failed to perform, he publicly excoriated them.
And Steinbrenner was never reluctant to trade away a player who didn’t meet his standards.
It’s possible that the Yankees, and the Mets, too, will shake up their teams by the Aug. 1 trade deadline. And maybe they’ll send out a few blunt messages that we long-suffering New York fans are entitled to get our money’s worth when we buy those very expensive tickets.
Jerry Kremer was a state assemblyman for 23 years, and chaired the Assembly’s Ways and Means Committee for 12 years. He now heads Empire Government Strategies, a business development and legislative strategy firm. Comments about this column? JKremer@liherald.com.

Food for thought: Whose tuna is it anyway?
We all have our breaking points, and I discovered my husband’s last Thursday evening after we arrived at a nearby restaurant for dinner. We had been there once before. The place had good word of mouth, and the reviews said the service was friendly and the food was imaginatively prepared. Perhaps we should have lingered longer over the word “imaginatively.”
know what I’m having,” he said, with great relish. “The tuna steak with bok choy and wasabi potatoes.” Our daughter said she would have the same.
I saw trouble looming on the horizon, and it had fins.
The waiter arrived to take our orders.
“I’ll have the tuna, cooked medium,” my daughter said.
who remembered us from the week before. “Sir, you sent your tuna back three times last week,” he said.
“That’s right,” Don said. ”Because it was raw each time, even though I ordered it well done.”
“I’m sorry,” the manager said. “But the chef won’t cook it past medium.”
Randi is on a brief leave. This column was originally published Jan. 13-19, 2000.
“What’s with all the blue swirls? Paint me polka dots.”
RANDI KREISS

We were dining with one of our favorite people, our daughter, and my husband wanted it to be a special treat for her.
We were seated by one of the friendly staff, and he made a point of removing the white napkins and offering us black ones, saying, “These won’t leave lint on your black slacks.”
“I’m impressed, “ I said. “What a thoughtful accommodation.”
Don was perusing the menu. “I
The waiter looked pained. “We cook the tuna rare,” he said. “Medium, with pink on the inside, is as far as we’ll go.” She said that was fine.
it had fins.
But it wasn’t fine with the big guy. “I would like the same,” my husband purred, “but I want mine well done. I don’t do pink.”
The waiter looked stricken. “I’m sorry, sir, but the chef won’t cook it past medium.”
“I know how I like my tuna,” Don said, quite reasonably. “I won’t send it back because it’s too well done. I like it that way. It’s my dinner, and I want it cooked the way I want to eat it.”
The waiter fetched the manager,
“You mean to tell me that I’m paying for this dinner and I have to eat it the way the chef likes it?”
“Sorry sir.”
“I assume the chef is the owner,” my husband said.
“Yes, sir.”
“And he doesn’t care if he loses a customer?”
“No, sir. He serves his tuna purple in the middle.”
By now my husband was turning purple himself. He canceled the tuna and ordered a vegetable plate.
Our daughter suggested we try to reframe the situation.
“You’re so angry, Dad. Try to think of this from the chef’s point of view. He’s a food artist. He’s the Van Gogh of food, and you’re saying to him,
The big guy wasn’t in the mood to reframe. “He can paint all the blue swirls he wants, but I don’t have to eat them. This guy is telling me that if I want to eat the meal I want to eat, I have to eat it the way he enjoys it.”
I see it as a control issue: Yes, you will. No, I won’t. The chef was a prima donna, an incarnation of “Seinfeld’s” soup Nazi. My husband couldn’t get the meal he wanted, which is, after all, the general idea of dining out, and he was right.
Scrambled eggs with ketchup, peanut butter and banana sandwiches, burnt steaks, matzo balls hard as hockey pucks: culinary idiosyncrasies are an American tradition. In the future, when we hear about a restaurant where there’s an artist at the burners, we will dine elsewhere.
Copyright 2023 Randi Kreiss. Randi can be reached at randik3@aol.com.
At a nearby restaurant, I saw trouble looming on the horizon, and
Many of us Bronx Bombers fans wish George Steinbrenner was still alive.JERRY KREMER
Local news is good for business
It’s no secret that recent years have been tough on small businesses and on newspapers.
A bipartisan bill, the Community News & Small Business Support Act that has been introduced in Congress, would offer relief to both newspapers and local businesses.
For too many newspapers, help can’t come soon enough. Economic challenges have resulted in too many communities seeing their local newspapers being forced to lay off staff, cut back on publication days, or — worse yet — close. On average, two newspapers are closing each week. That hurts local businesses and residents in the long (and short) run.
However, despite the challenges, what remains true is that local newspapers make a difference in their communities.
But don’t just take my word for it. Let’s look at the numbers, and why America’s Newspapers has been pushing for the Community News & Small Business Support Act to be introduced.
A recent national study of 5,000 Americans older than 18 was conducted by the independent research firm Coda Ventures for America’s Newspapers, and provides compelling evidence of the importance, relevance and vitality of today’s newspapers in the American media landscape.
Readers told us that their local newspaper makes a difference. The study shows that 79 percent of Americans read/use local news “to stay informed” about their cities, counties and communities. They also said they rely on their local paper to feel connected to their community. To decide where they stand on local issues. To find places and things to do. To talk with people about things happening in the commu-
Letters
We need to hear much more from
Peter King

nity, because they find it enjoyable or entertaining, and to be a better citizen.
And, contrary to popular belief, readers across all age groups turn to local newspapers and their digital products to stay informed about their communities.
Readers also told us they need more local news from their community paper. As one survey respondent said, “Our paper keeps getting smaller. I would like to see more news items, what’s happening in town, what’s new in politics, etc. And they need to be quicker to respond to breaking news.”
All of that takes a committed, local staff — something the legislation, introduced by U.S. Rep. Claudia Tenney, of New York, and Rep. Suzan DelBene, of Washington, will help to make happen.
So, what would this legislation mean to your local community?
Local businesses with fewer than 50 employees would receive a five-year nonrefundable tax credit of up to $5,000 in the first year, and up to $2,500 in the subsequent four years, based on their spending with local newspapers and local media. Our study showed that six out of 10 American adults use newspaper advertising to help them decide what brands, products and local services to buy.
Newspaper readers also are almost twice as likely to purchase products in a number of important advertising categories than nonnewspaper readers, including automobiles, trucks and SUVs; home furnishings; home improvement products and services; and home services like pest control, plumbing and heating.
With this legislation, we expect to see more businesses being able to afford to advertise to consumers, which in turn helps communities thrive.
For local newspapers, a five-year refundable tax credit would help them hire more journalists to bring you more news. It’s a win-win for local communities.
Newspapers would receive a tax credit to be
used for the compensation of journalists. The credit would cover 50 percent of journalists’ compensation in the first year, and 30 percent of compensation — up to $50,000 — in the subsequent four years.
This tax credit would only be available to local community papers with fewer than 750 employees and, if they don’t invest in their newsroom, they don’t get the credit.
And these tax credits are only available to local newspapers. National newspaper outlets are not eligible.
The importance of local newspapers and local business is the reason Reps. Tenney and DelBene introduced the legislation. We are most grateful for their support.
We need your support, as well, to encourage legislators to enact this legislation. Please contact the offices of your senators and representatives in Congress and encourage them to add their support to this legislation.
These tax credits aren’t permanent — they will sunset in five years. But those critical five years will allow the newspaper industry the time needed to address the challenges that it is facing from Big Tech, which often uses newspapers’ content without compensation, as well as other technological and market challenges. Visit USA.gov/elected-officials for the contact information for your legislators.
More local reporting means more access for hometown news readers like you rely on. And stronger newspapers mean stronger advertising vehicles for local businesses.
On behalf of its approximately 1,700 newspaper and Solutions Partner companies, America’s Newspapers is committed to explaining, defending and advancing the vital role of newspapers in democracy and civil life. We put an emphasis on educating the public on all the ways newspapers contribute to building a community identity and the success of local businesses.
Learn more at Newspapers.org.
Dean Ridings is chief executive of the advocacy organization America’s Newspapers.

To the Editor:
Re Peter King’s column last week, “At this dinner, true patriotism was on vivid display”: Mr. King’s columns have been mildly interesting, often nostalgic, but the deprive us of his greatest asset. As a former congressman with long experience as a respectable Republican, his informed opinion is valuable to Long Island. Recounting the Patriot Awards Dinner is interesting and nostalgic, but the present need for heroes is expressed only as wishful thinking. Noting the heroes and the 9/11 terrorists should not blind us to the present terrorist threat.
Candidate Donald Trump proclaims the constitutional right to do anything he wants as president. He further details the goals of his mission of “retribution,” involving destruction, uprooting, elimination and the like. His militant acolytes sign on, his team details the means by which they’ll establish an autocracy during 2025, his media broadcast the message, his donors unsheathe their checkbooks.
Surely the honorable Mr. King has some thoughts on
Election integrity in New York?
over the past 20-something years, election integrity has become a hot-button issue in our country.
In 2000, Democrats claimed that George W. Bush was an illegitimate president because of hanging chads in Florida.
In 2016, Democrats alleged that Donald Trump stole the presidency by secretly colluding with Russia. And in 2020, many Republicans asserted that the presidential election was rigged, which was the catalyst for Jan 6.
None of the claims in any of those elections were proved, but what is clear is that the past twoplus decades of such baseless allegations on both sides of the political aisle have taken their toll on voter confidence on our electoral process. A study in 2000 found an average level of public faith in national elections between 1964 and 1996 of 70 percent. In 2020, a Gallup Poll found that just 59 percent of Americans were very or somewhat confident in U.S. elections.
So you might think it would be government’s main priority to restore faith in our electoral process. Unfortunately, your assumption would be incorrect, and your faith misplaced. Instead, the desire to secure power consistently outweighs restoring public trust in our elections, and common-sense election reforms supported by the public are consistently rejected. A 2021 Monmouth University poll found that 80 percent of Americans
support requiring voters to show photo identification to cast a ballot, but Democrats consistently reject that idea. Despite the requirement of photo IDs for everything from library cards to driver’s licenses to accessing Medicaid to boarding an airplane, Democrats, incredibly, claim that requiring voters’ photo IDs would disenfranchise a portion of the population.
Even more concerning, political parties appear to be passing laws that are fundamentally changing our election process — laws that are designed to place a heavy thumb on the election scale in favor of one party over the other.
For the past five years, New York has been a one-party state, with Democrats controlling the Assembly, the Senate and the governor’s office. In that time, Democrats have passed election law after election law not to strengthen and depoliticize state and local elections, but rather to give a blatant advantage to Democratic candidates.
In 2014, then Gov. Andrew Cuomo and other Democrats supported a state constitutional amendment, passed overwhelmingly by the public, that established a Redistricting Commission to independently draw up the state’s political maps to avoid gerrymandering, beginning in 2021. At the time, Republicans controlled the Senate.
When 2020 rolled around, Democrats were in full control, and their desire for that independent commission was gone. They rejected its proposed legislative maps, and tried passing a law to allow
Letters
these proposed alterations to the government he helped to preserve? Or on the character of some of those he served with? Or on the unusual tactics of Tommy Tuberville, Marjorie Taylor Greene or Jim Jordan? Mr. King must feel something about marionettes like George Santos replacing serious public servants like himself. Mr. King’s service is recent and thus still relevant, but it will become less so with time. The time to speak, to advise, is now.

Protect chimps — and unborn babies
To the Editor:
Re Randi Kreiss’s column last week, “Chimps face N.Y. court test of personhood” (reprised from Jun 11-17, 2015): I usually don’t agree with Randi, because we have different political outlooks and worldviews, but this time I do, because cruelty is morally wrong. There are exceptions such as war, but those are rare. Her quote from Jane Goodall and reference to chimpanzees’ similar DNA were poignant. Why, then, don’t we all extend the same concern to creatures that share 100 percent of our DNA — an exact
themselves to draw the new districts, contrary to the 2014 reforms. Over the express will of the people, Democrats drew the new congressional, Senate and Assembly districts. Ultimately, their action was struck down, deemed unconstitutional, and the districts were redrawn by an independent special master.
DAfter such a strong rebuke by the courts, you might think Democrats would reconsider such political overreach. Unfortunately, the exact opposite has occurred. In the last two weeks of the legislative session in Albany, the Democrats passed laws, which Gov. Kathy Hochul has indicated she will sign, that fundamentally transform the state’s election process.
One bill would move most town and county elections to even-numbered years, when Democrats typically have their highest voter turnout. But the Democratic sponsors of the bill excluded from the legislation all cities, including New York City, village and school board elections, which consistently have among the lowest voter turnout. Opponents of the bill, including me, believe that important local issues, and races for Nassau County and Town of Hempstead offices, would be overshadowed by national and state issues and races. The county and town have held elections in odd-numbered years for over 80 years, but the 18 percent higher turnout in even years may be just what Democrats need to win local legislative seats, which I believe is the true purpose of the change.
match, actually? And these creatures look “just like a human baby,” because they are human, and in fact “persons,” regardless of what current laws say. But unfortunately, most people are like Randi’s dinner crowd, who “just couldn’t care about what happens to chimpanzees” — or unborn human children.
I challenge Randi to use her own logic to help defend the unborn.
And I will contribute to janegoodall.org.
JACK HOLLAND BaldwinSome of us know what teachers go through
To the Editor:
Re Mark Nolan’s column in last week’s Herald, “You have no idea with teachers deal with”: Yep — all sad but true. My wife is a retired first-grade teacher. It’s hard to believe that so much starts there, but it does.
Yes, teachers are well paid, but most of them really earn it! Thanks to them, and God bless them.
DICK CARDOzO WestburyAnother bill passed by Democrats is the New York Early Mail Voter Act, which would allow voters to cast mail-in ballots without an excuse during the nine-day early-voting period. As things stand, the state Constitution allows voting by mail only for those with specific excuses — a disability, an illness, or an absence from their county on Election Day. In 2021, this same measure was put before state voters as a ballot amendment, and soundly rejected. As a result, the Democrats, as they did with redistricting, ignored the will of the voters will and created this legislative workaround that doesn’t need voter approval.
There will certainly be legal challenges to these bills, but the Democrats also have that covered. In the last days of the session, they passed a bill that requires a person filing a constitutional challenge to an election law to do so in one of only four jurisdictions. To no one’s surprise, those four courts are in areas that are heavily Democratic, with similar judicial profiles.
We passed coincidence in New York a long time ago.
The actions of the Democratic-led State Legislature in the past several years, and particularly this past session, would clearly lead a reasonable person to conclude that these so-called “reforms” have very little to do with restoring trust in our voting system, and instead ensure that the majority party remains in power.
But hey, as many of my Democratic colleagues said as they were passing these “reforms,” they “trust the voters.” That is, if they vote the way Democrats want them to.
Brian Curran represents the 21st Assembly District.

emocrats have passed election laws just to give their candidates the advantage.Brian CUrran









