________ Franklin square/elmont _______
HERALD Solages plans to take on utilities
Nassau County honors top cops
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VOL. 24 NO. 34
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AUGUST 18 - 24, 2022
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Pickleball’s popularity is just soaring pros, you can play pickleball. It’s great.” Binder added that pickleball Pickleball Plus, an emerging has been gaining in popularity, West Hempstead company that and leagues have been created invites anyone to play the trendy that already play at the complex. sport in a climate-controlled “We have an intermediate arena, has wrapped up its most ladies’ league, which is really recent clinic and popular, and we do hopes to begin have other groups, another one in the leagues sponsored by coming months. the PAL program,” Jackie Binder, an said Binder. “They associate for Pickletake some court time ball Plus, said the with friends, they sport’s popularity join a league. It’s lies in its simplicity. easy to learn, and it’s “It’s an easier very social.” sport for anybody to Pickleball Plus is really learn, and it the largest such comalso makes a great pany in the state and transition if they the second largest in learn pickleball, and the nation, accordthen they decide that ing to Binder. they want to take up The Police Athlettennis or some other ic League’s program JACKIE BINDER is “the first pickleracket sport,” Binder s a i d . “ T h e y ’ v e Associate at ball pro g ram on already got a lot of Pickleball Plus Long Island, as best the basics.” as I can tell,” said She said it’s an Binder. “Franklin easy way for the youth to learn Square was really the pioneer.” athleticism, more of which is The program sponsored by necessary for tennis. the league includes both Frank“We offer an absolute begin- lin Square and Elmont. Picklener lesson if you’ve never played ball Plus also services other before,” she said. “After one hour on the court with one of our CONTINUED ON PAGE 5
By BRIAN PFAIL bpfail@liherald.com
Courtesy Carrié Solages
COUNTY LEGISLATOR CARRIÉ Solages announced a bill that would order utility companies to pay taxes on all of their properties, while acknowledging their existing usage, too.
Solages wants utilities to pay their fair share of taxes
Congressional hopeful proposes new legislation By BRIAN PFAIL bpfail@liherald.com
Nassau County Legislator Carrié Solages is sponsoring a bill that would require utility companies to pay their fair share of taxes on the propert i e s t h e y ow n . S o l a g e s unveiled the proposed legislation at an Aug. 8 press conference at the Legislature. The bill has gained the support of his minority caucus colleagues, including Minority Leader Kevan Abra-
hams and Legislators Delia DeRiggi-Whitton and Arnold W. Drucker. “Other classifications are paying more than their fair share,” Solages said. Properties are assessed by category, including residential, commercial, industrial, agricultural, vacant lot, and public services. Solages’s proposed legislation would make it mandatory for utility companies to disclose the use, age, and the original and current cost of
their generators, telecommunication lines and other property in Nassau County. They would be required to disclose and itemize their assets, even properties that were no longer in use during the previous year. Property that was added or is in the process of being built or improved on would also be required to be included. “Those entities have to file income and expenses,” Solages said. “The county assesses CONTINUED ON PAGE 4
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here’s not a lot of equipment. You just need a paddle, a pair of sneakers, and you’re all set.