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Honoring Jewish war veterans
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Vol. 25 No. 13
MARCH 23 - 29, 2023
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County marks a day to honor Rich Salgado By ANA BoRRUTo aborruto@liherald.com
Christine Rivera/Herald
Shamrocking the house Dancers from Hagen Kavenagh School of Irish Dance show off their traditional Irish step dancing skills at St. Catherine of Sienna’s recent party. Story, more photos, Page 2.
Rich Salgado is known to be one of the “most trusted men among professional athletes,” and an agent to the stars. As the chief executive of Coastal Advisors, Salgado is an insurance adviser to more than 500 of the most prominent names in the world of sports, business, media and the entertainment industry. Clients include for mer New York Giants defensive end Michael Strahan, Fox Sports analyst Reggie Bush, former NBA point guard Jeremy Lin, ESPN senior NFL Insider Adam Schefter, and actress Melissa Joan Hart.
It’s three decades worth of accomplishments and advocacy for the man known as “Big Daddy” — enough for Nassau County Executive Bruce Blakeman to officially proclaimed March 7 as Rich “Big Daddy” Salgado Day. Blakeman honored Salgado in Mineola, joined by Strahan, actor Hisham Tawfiq from NBC’s “The Blacklist,” and Schefter. “It’s always an honor for me to recognize somebody who has contributed so much to Nassau County, Long Island, and quite frankly, the whole region — and perhaps we can say the whole country,” Blakeman said. “He’s always been a very outgoing, Continued on page 4
D’Esposito heads to the border, learns a lot about security By ANA BoRRUTo aborruto@liherald.com
It was his second trip to the border that separates the United States from Mexico, yet U.S. Rep. Anthony D’Esposito still finds himself discovering something new. He got a firsthand look at the border situation near El Paso, Texas, before he was elected to Congress. And now D’Esposito has returned — this time with several of his House Committee on Homeland Security colleagues. D’Esposito’s take away? The scene is worse than before. More than 200,000 people are
trying to cross the border each month, according to a January report by Pew Research Center — numbers that haven’t been this high since the turn of the century. While D’Esposito believes people should have the opportunity to come to America, they still must “come through the front door” —legally. And for him, that means more funding for border patrol agents and the resources he says they need to keep the country’s borders safe. “Our border patrol agents are doing the best that they can with the resources that they have,” D’Esposito said. “But the Biden administration is failing to
implement the laws or allow them to implement the laws that are in place.” John Modlin, chief patrol agent for the Tucson sector with U.S. Customs and Border Protection, told a House committee last month that Border Patrol has just 19,300 people, where it actually needs 22,000. Biden said his federal budget package would grow the ranks to 23,000, according to Government Executive. At the border, D’Esposito described a car rolling into the entrance to El Paso where border agents seized a significant amount of illegal narcotics. While in a helicopter overhead, D’Esposito watched several
migrants attempt to scale border security structures. The congressman spoke to those who live and work near the border — educators, business owners, farmers and ranchers — and says he heard about how what’s happening at the border is having a negative impact on their daily lives. “You really can’t get an
understanding of what’s going on there until you see it with your own eyes,” D’Esposito said. Next month, D’Esposito’s House committee plans to roll out a border bill he says will focus on better physical protection of the border, funding for border patrol agents, as well as mental health resources. Continued on page 16