Bellmore Herald 02-17-2022

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Vol. 25 No. 10

MARCH 3 - 9, 2022

18/21 itc FG Demi Condensed

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Maidenbaum Propert y Tax Reduction Gro up, LLC 483 Chestnut Street, Cedarhurst, NY 11516

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County stands with Ukraine

THE LEADER IN PROP ERTY TAX REDUCTION

Hochul lifts school mask mandate said, “and you see the spikes and the infection rates that really validated the rationale and the jvallone@liherald.com, rbethany@liherald.com logic behind ensuring that we G ov. K at hy H o ch u l a n - had those masks in place nounced last Sunday that the through those spikes — especialstate directive requiring chil- ly the Omicron variant.” dren to wear masks in schools On Sunday, in a joint stateand child care facilities would ment, superintendents from the end on Wednesday, after the Her- Bellmore-Merrick Central High ald went to press. School District, the Hochul likened North Bellmore the Covid-19 panS ch o o l D i s t r i c t , demic to a “war that Bellmore Public has been unfolding Schools, the North for the last two Merrick Union Free years, where our School District and country has been the Merrick Union under siege by this Free School District unseen assailant — responded to one that has taken Hochul’s announcethousands of lives ment. of Americans and JENNIFER TEppER The statement New Yorkers.” read, “beginning on Bellmore In defense of the t h i s We d n e s d ay, mask requirement March 2nd, masks she instituted, Hochul said that will be optional for students and when she was sworn into office staff at school.” six months ago, her priority was The superintendents noted to get children back to school, that they were aware that the but that wearing masks was the community would express a best to guarantee their safety, range of feelings about the especially since no pediatric vac- changes. “It is critical that we cine was available until Novem- maintain a respectful environber. ment,” the statement read. “Our “We’re going to talk about priority will always be that our where we came from in these last six months,” the governor Continued on page 13

By JoRDAN VAlloNE and REINE BETHANY

‘There’s just no inventory’

With real estate in short supply on South Shore, prices keep rising, and low bidders lose By JoRDAN VAlloNE jvallone@liherald.com

Since the start of the coronavirus pandemic, Long Island real estate prices have been on the rise due to an influx of people seeking homes who are met with limited inventory. With the sale of a home for almost $2.5 million sale set to be finalized this week in South Merrick, the South Shore real estate market reflects the trends that are being seen elsewhere on the

island. Real estate agent Tatyana Agron, who works with VI Properties, a Hewlett-based subsidiary of Compass Inc. that has overseen the sale, told the Herald that it will be the highest registered home sale Bellmore-Merrick has ever seen. The house, on Halyard Drive, will close for just under the $2.5 million asking price on March 4. When a sale is registered, there is a government record of it. “We don’t know what we

don’t know,” Agron said, meaning that there is a chance that a higher-priced home may have been sold privately. “But from what we know, this is the highest-priced sale ever in Merrick — not just in recent times,” she added. According to Agron, the sale in Merrick is nothing out of the ordinary in the current real estate market. “They’re definitely on the rise,” she said of home prices. “I don’t think buyers, sellers or brokers Continued on page 12

M

***ECrWss*** LOCAL pOstAL CUstOmEr

WITH THE sAlE of a home for almost $2.5 million set to be finalized this week in Merrick, it is evident that South Shore real estate prices are on the rise due to high demand and low inventory. This map of the Bellmore-Merrick shores shows hardly any homes for sale under $600,000, the median listing price on Long Island.

y kids couldn’t be happier about the masks being removed.

prsrt std ECrWss Us pOstAGE pAid pErmit 301

Courtesy Zillow Group Inc.


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