Franklin Square/Elmont Herald 09-15-2022

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t has only been a few months since we’ve returned to some semblance of normal at the Herald. And we’re grateful for readers like you who have stayed with us all while we’ve stayed with you through the thick and thin of the coronavirus epidemic. Still, it is important to stop and acknowledge the resiliency and strength of Franklin Square and trustederingfocusedWegooditwithmanagedYorkers.ciallybeenhascrimetion,andal,politicalhealthElmont.neighboringitsWiththecrisis,upheavbothnationallocal—inflaandthewave—lifecertainlynoteasy,espeforNewYetwe’vetostayyouthroughall,inboththeandthebad.willremainondelivtoyou,ourreaders,what

eighbors gathered last Saturday eve ning at the edge of Rath Park to remember those lost in the Sept. 11 attacks on the World Trade Center. They unveiled a new stone in memory of Fire Commissioner Joseph Torregrossa and others who have died of 9/11-related illnesses.

most, whether it’s our coverage of the schools — public and pri vate — the community fairs, the parades and the myriad other events.Allof us at the Herald strive to report the news of the day swiftly and most accurately as possible. Balance is key during these difficult times. We have also adapted in order to provide readers with even more, going above and beyond your tradi tional weekly newspaper to give

The community, Franklin Square & Mun son Fire Chief Joseph Gerrato said, gathered to “pay tribute to the enduring spirit of free dom” and to “pay tribute and admire the integ rity and commitment” of those who served and sacrificed everything on that fateful day.

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Franklin Square honors those lost on — and after — Sept. 11

By BRIAN PFAIL bpfail@liherald.com

FIREFIGHTERS FROM THE Franklin Square & Munson Fire Department stood at attention during the 9/11 memorial service last Saturday across from Rath Park.

VOL. 24 NO. 38 SEPTEMBER 15-21, 2022 $1.00 HERALD Franklin square/elmont Incoming

If you are already a Herald subscriber, thank you for your support. You can email me at bpfail@liherald.com, or call me directly at (516) 569-4000, Ext. 265.Enjoy your community paper!

you the latest scoop online at LIHerald.com, and in our regu lar online newsletter. Thou sands of people visit our web site each month to find out what’s happening in their towns.“People want to know what’s happening locally in town. That’s what they want,” said Lisa DelliPizzi, president of the Franklin Square Chamber of Commerce. “Your reporting is excel lent — the Herald covers thing.”everyYoudon’t need to fear hyperlocalsupportingscriber,alreadyingwhatperreadopmentsresidentialcommercialnewsblindsidedbeingbyofproposedanddevelifyouthisnewspaeveryweek.Ifyoulikeyou’rereadandyou’renotasubconsiderourjour

Brian J. Pfail Senior Reporter storage facility aims high

Brian Pfail/Herald

“We gather to remember the ultimate sacri fice of all service members that was made that Tuesday morning, in particular by service per sonnel of Nassau County and our Franklin Square community residents,” Gerrato said.

“The actions of our brothers and sisters are a testament to the resolve of the American spirit,” he added. “They will not be lost in vain.”The actions of the police and fire depart ments, Gerrato said, served as an inspiration to the community to give back to one another. “The stone forever will be here, so everybody will be able to reflect,” he said of the new addi tion to the memorial, which honors Torregros

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The BZA said it does not speak on any ongoing mat ters, and this case has 62 days to give a determination, according to New York State Code Section 267-A. Fur thermore, the matter can be extended by mutual consent.

Dawideit, co-owner of Valley Caterers, original ly said the facility would block points of access to his storefront for delivery trucks. Dawaideit said his attor neys reached out to Hussain’s and they are seeking a compromise that would not encroach on points of access for delivery trucks. As a result of Valley’s change of posi tion, many residents are opting out and shopping else where.What was suggested to Hussain was to build the stor age facility in a different location, potentially north of the lot behind Valley Caterers, where there is more space. A two-story configuration was also suggested thinking residents may be more open to a smaller struc ture.“Residents are all opposed to a three-story storage facility,” said Lisa DelliPizzi, president of the Franklin Square Chamber of Commerce. “It’s going to affect the value of everyone’s real estate–it doesn’t belong on Franklin Avenue.”

“I think that people will forget about this in a heart beat because it doesn’t affect anyone. It’s totally benign,” said Browne. “It’ll make it look nicer. 99% of people in Franklin Square won’t even be aware of it unless you need a storage locker.”

“It’s also going to affect the real estate values of the homes in the area,” she said.

The Franklin Square Civic Association conducted a March 21 survey where 594 residents sided against the build, seven motioned in favor, and nine remained neu tral.Steve

“A lot of the people that use these facilities are local businesses,” said Browne. “It’s not taller than what’s per mitted by the Town of Hempstead. A house is allowed to be 30 feet Brownetall.”has storage facilities being built in Oceans ide, Levittown, and Elmont. He says there has been little uproar there, and in fact, these facilities pay hundreds of thousands of dollars in taxes that go into the school dis tricts.“It’s important that the community knows that this also helps Valley Caterers, and it’s going to improve the site aesthetically,” said Browne. “It’s going to bring tax revenue.”

Browne wishes the community would be more on board, hoping for more transparency on that matter as well as trust.

Hussain isn’t new to such entanglements. In 2019, he attempted to build another three-story unit near the cor ner of Hempstead Turnpike and Franklin Avenue, caus ing residents to voice their opposition.

“We believe that the construction of the storage facili ty will benefit the commercial corridor on Franklin Ave nue. We are very pleased that, as part of the re-develop ment, we have reached an agreement with our neighbor Valley Caterers that will allow Valley’s customers to park in the parking lot of the storage facility and to enter and exit over our property. The agreement secures parking and access rights for Valley’s customers so that Valley will be able to operate successfully for years to come, and we are proud that Valley has given the project its full sup port. In addition, as part of the re-development, we will landscape the parking area in the front and around the building, beautifying both the storage site and Valley Caterer’s property, and adding greenery to the area along Franklin Avenue for the first time.”

ATTORNEYS FOR NAUMAN Hussain, who has proposed the three-story facility, created this simulated view of the project.

RAPID RESPONSE URGENT Care and Island Recreational are among two of the buildings to be demol ished for the new storage facility to be built.

Councilwoman Michaelle Solages said she supports the residents and believes “that these storage facilities should be put in warehouse construction zones, and not supplanted into strip malls or places where” small busi nesses or microbusinesses can open up.

The storage facility is intended to be built at 600 Franklin Avenue. The owner of the neighboring Synergy Fitness, Nauman Hussain, is spearheading the build and has already requested the necessary variances in order to knock down an existing building owned by the gym andAccordingrebuild.

His office of McLaughlin & Stern released a press announcement, cited below:

THE LOT THAT will accompany the storage facility was frequented by community shoppers of Valley Caterers, but Nauman Hussain has allegedly negged on his promise to reserve spots for Valley.

Franklin Square versus Nauman Hussain

“At the end of the day, the community gets a lot more tax dollars at the site,” he said while adding the traffic congestion would be an almost nonexistent change.

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to Frank Culmone, president of the Frank lin Square Civic Association, its construction would damage the architectural and historical integrity of Franklin Square. He said the building would be an “eyesore” to the two-story buildings accustomed to Franklin Square. Culmone also fears its construction may set a precedent, further damaging the community.

Franklin Square residents have been waiting for over a month for a decision on the construction of a 3-story storage facility. Chairman David Weiss of The Town of Hempstead Board of Zoning Appeals (BZA) promised an answer within a month’s time from the July 13 public hearing before the zoning board.

“I also believe that [if] the community doesn’t want an entity, we should be abiding by them. [If] the community is coming out and saying ‘no,’ they should be listened to,” said the Solages.

Courtesy Chris Browne

Photos by Brian Pfail/Herald

Chris Browne of the law office of McLaughlin & Stern, who represents Hussain, disagrees with the char acterization of the build.

“Most that I have talked to do not want it there. It’s an eyesore,” she said. “Also [it’s] a storage unit–anyone can rentDelliPizziit.” also said neighboring businesses have already been affected by the politicking. Valley Catering is starting to see its customers shop elsewhere after pledging support to the construction.

By BRIAN PFAIL bpfail@liherald.com

AN FLAGAMERICAN

sa, who died last March, and others who have succumbed to illness since the attacks. “Everybody will be remem bered.”“Nineteen men attacked us with a bar barity unequal in our nation’s history,” said Deacon Carol Brosnan, of Ascension Lutheran Church, who gave the invoca tion. “They murdered people of all colors, creeds and nationalities and made war upon the entire free world.”

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Photos by Brian Pfail/Herald FIRE CHIEF JOSEPH Gerrato spoke about Sept. 11 and the late Commissioner Joseph Torregrossa.

The Rev. Doug Arcoleo, of St. Cathe rine of Sienna spoke next. “Like many of the greatest generation can remember where they were when the first Catholic president of the United States of America was assassinated” — and when Elvis Pre sley died, Arcoleo added — “I would like

Ellen Andrasick, of Franklin Square, a member of the Daughters of Italy, said local communities need to work harder on togetherness, and that the anniversary of Sept. 11 should not be the one time when people come together. Andrasick said she hoped that in the upcoming months there would be less tension and a climate of tolerance and respect that the nation has always fostered.

The losses of that day, Brosnan said, have affected several generations. Chil dren never got the chance to have shared memories with their parents or to be guided through life. She also noted the sacrifice of members of the military, 7,000 of whom have died since Sept. 11.

“I would imagine, if I took a poll, that most people over the age of 20 years who are here today were in church on that Sunday after 911,” Arcoleo said. “America was never stronger. America was never greater. America was no more beautiful.”

We were praying, he said, not as Republicans or Democrats, or as conser vatives or liberals, or as Mets, Yankees, Rangers or Islanders fans. “We, the peo ple, on that Sunday after 9/11, gathered in church as one nation under God,” Arcoleo said.“We have to remember the heroes,” Town of Hempstead Councilman Tom Muscarella said after the ceremony. “We have to make sure that we lead to a better tomorrow. We have to use gentleness, kindness, generosity — all the qualities of Americans that come together and make sure there’s a better tomorrow.”

Brosnan described Sept. 11 as the mod ern generation’s Pearl Harbor. “We also witnessed something distinctly Ameri can: ordinary citizens rising to the occa sion and responding with extraordinary acts of heroism,” she said. “We saw cour age from the passengers aboard Flight 93, who recited the 23rd Psalm and then charged the cockpit.”

us all to remember not where we were on 9/11, but where we were on the Sunday after,” he said. “We were in church that Sunday night.”

THE REV. DOUG Arcoleo, of St. Catherine of Sienna, blessed the new stone in memory of those who died of illnesses.9/11-related hung between two fire trucks on Naple Avenue, far left, for the memori al.

At Rath Park, recalling a day none will forget

said he liked “that Queens-Long Island feel where it’s very ‘neighborhoodie’” in Franklin Square.“Broken Hearted opens with a shot of the New York City skyline,” said Ammendolea. “The camera eventual ly spins around, and you’re looking at Queens and Long Island.”Hesaid he would make a character out of the loca tion, which was a lesson he learned from Dumped –strong character development.

He is currently trying to further his brand by getting Broken Hearted on iTunes but needs another two feature films for Apple to approve. He is also looking into Netflix and HBO Max, but as it stands, it’s ongoing. It took him two years alone to get on Amazon Prime. They posted Broken Hearted on August 15 of this year.

By BRIAN PFAIL bpfail@liherald.com

He said, “the way I describe Broken Hearted [is] its kind of like the Notebook, but told through the James Marsden character point of view – the guy that she had to choose from instead of the Ryan Gosling character.”

The other Franklin Square film, Broken Hearted, was released in 2019. He says it’s more of a drama, which he prefers. At the time of filming both movies, he was living in Franklin Square and would use his house for a lot of theAmmendoleashots.

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He plans to dive into other themes like forgiveness, communication, and society’s overreactions to the mod ern age in his future work.

It was released in 2015 and was about a group of young men who pull pranks on one of their exes. The idea came from his experience in high school. It was more of a “buddy comedy,” than anything else. Ammen dolea views it as his “rookie” work.

“If I’m writing, usually I’m playing songs in the back ground on random,” said Ammendolea. “I just have these 7000 songs on my iPod that I play at random. So there’s certainly a lot of options for inspiration.”

Franklin Square flick hits Amazon Prime

He wrote and wrote until, eventually, he created a product that was “watchable.” Ammendolea said from there, the process just became easier. He utilizes music to help him get ideas because it makes his mind think.

“Why wouldn’t she choose him if she had to choose between the two of them? I tried to delve into that a bit.”

“I think the first script I wrote was when I was 18. It wasn’t very good,” said Ammendolea. “It never made it, but it just kind of gets you to think that way, like how to make characters and form a story.”

“I think any kind of film, the best films, are ones that have all the elements of tension and drama and then a little bit of comedy to lighten the mood when appropri ate,” Ammendolea said. “I try to mix it all if I can – that would be ideal.”

A feature flick written, produced, and directed by a former Franklin Square resident just landed on Amazon Prime’s video-on-demand streaming service. The film was also shot in Franklin Square, making it unique to theJosephcommunity.Ammendolea, the man behind the film, has been in the movie-making business for nearly 10 years now.“I kind of had a good technical mind in high school for it, though it wasn’t at the level of other filmmakers,” said Ammendolea. “Writing comes from doing it just fromHepractice.”saidmuch of his skills were acquired through repetitive practice and learning from his mistakes.

Ammendolea acknowledges friendship, loyalty, and romance as recurring themes in his works. More specifi cally, he believes the films aim to express finding your true soulmate rather than the person who happens to be right in front of you or making relationships with people that are more deserving of it.

THE TITLE SHOT from Broken Hearted is at the Unisphere.

The film has received the most positive praise out of all Ammendolea’s works. It won the 2019 Judges Choice Award at the Corona Film Festival. It was a semi-finalist in the International Movie Film Festival. It was also nominated for best Long Island feature film at the Long Island International Film Expo in 2020, and it won the best feature at the New York and Long Island Film Festi val, much to Ammendolea’s shock.

“Broken Hearted is specifically in Queens, in Long Island, in New York,” Ammendolea said.

Ammendolea started out in Hollywood when he worked for the Late Show with David Letterman in 2004. He was still in school and needed a part-time job. That experience showed him how difficult it would be to get into the industry, so he decided to make it secondary to his work as a health plan manager. It would take him 10 years to ultimately make his first feature film, Dumped.

Courtesy Joseph Ammendolea

–Jordan Vallone

E

Trade Center, and a wall with names of county residents who died. A 6,500-pound red granite monument was erected to honor first responders who have died from illnesses since rushing to help at the site of the attacks in Manhattan.

Town of Hempstead honors Sept. 11 victims

Nassau County remembers those we lost

NASSAU COUNTY EXECUTIVE Bruce Blakeman spoke at the county’s recitation ceremony and musical tribute dedicated to victims of 9/11.

THE MEMORIAL AT Eisenhower Park, a tribute to those lost in the Sept. 11, 2001, terrorist attacks, features salvaged beams from the World Trade Center, a wall filled with names, and a red granite monument that honors first responders who have died of illnesses related to their rescue and recovery efforts on and after Sept. 11.

Courtesy Town Councilman Christopher Carini

Town Supervisor Don Clavin thanked those who attended on social media.

HEMPSTEAD TOWN BOARD members joined Supervisor Don Clavin to pay homage to the 200 town residents who perished in the attacks of Sept. 11, 2001, during a sunrise memorial service at Point Lookout Park at Lido Beach.

Year after year, visitors take part in the town’s ceremony, tossing hundreds of white carnations into the ocean as a symbol of the many lives lost. Loved ones of those deceased also have the opportunity to make rubbings of the

“Thank you to everyone who gath ered at Point Lookout for this morning’s

It was part of Nassau County’s commemoration of the Sept. 11, 2001, terrorist attacks during a Sunday evening gathering at Eisenhower Park.

Just last year, a new monument was added to the memorial that already has salvaged beams from the former World

–Mallory Wilson

Katrina O’Brien/Herald photos

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sunrise memorial to remember and pray for the ones we lost — their fami lies, and our heroic first responders,” he wrote. “God bless America.”

Visitors came from all over to remember loved ones who lost their lives 21 years ago. Tears were shed and people embraced as more than 300 names were read aloud so that they will never be forgotten. County Executive Bruce Blakeman also heard a name he recognized — Thomas Jurgens, a New York state court officer, and his nephew.

Bob Beckwith, a Long Beach resi dent who stood next to President George W. Bush when he spoke at the ruins of the World Trade Center in the days following the attacks, led with the Pledge of Allegiance. After that, Chris Macchio performed “Ave Maria.”After the ceremony, roses were placed by loved ones near the names of those lost on the memorial located near the Harry Chapin Lakeside Theatre.

t’s been just over two decades since the World Trade Center and the Pentagon was attacked, and a plane full of heroes stopped even more attacks over Pennsylvania. More than 3,000 lives were lost that day, including 200 from the Town of Hemp stead.Hundreds gathered at Point Lookout Park at Lido Beach last weekend for the town’s 9-11 Sunrise Memo rial service. Point Look out’s beach is remembered as a location where people assembled to watch the World Trade Center as it burned, sending high clouds of smoke up in the air — visible despite its great distance.

ach name was read, one-byone. Shared. Remembered.

HERALDSQUARE/ELMONTFRANKLIN—202215,Septemebr 6

names etched on the memorial, with pencils and paper provided by the town.

A permanent memorial to the victims was dedicat ed at the park in 2017, fea turing the names of more than 3,000 people, etched on granite plaques. It also includes a rusted 30-foot long steel beam from the twinManytowers.first responders to the attacks have battled and died from 9-11-related illnesses, and their names have been added to the memorial since its erection — and will continue to be added in the future.

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Ashna Mehra, a resident physician from North Hemp stead, stressed that reproduc tive health care is a major aspect of health care.

from the Town of North Hempstead.

Coyle believes children not wanted by their mothers should be placed in adoptive care so their potential for life isn’t squan dered.There are also others who, believe it or not, don’t have a strong opinion one way or the other on the controversial topic.

Abortion laws uncovered in town codes

L healthreproductivecriminalizingexistcannotcare.

Deanna Drury Oyster Bay resident

Officials urge local leaders to remove them

“I was disgusted to know that these abortion restrictions were still on the books,” said Deanna Drury, who lives in Oyster Bay. “Laws cannot exist criminaliz ing reproductive health care.”

“It’s shocking that over a million people on Long Island currently live in a community where there are still abortion restrictions on the books,” Kaplan said. “We know that these laws were enacted with the sole purpose of getting between women and their right to choose.”Thestate senator also believes officials in affected communities should follow the lead of the Town of North Hempstead.

these draconian restrictions to the dust bin of history where they belong.”

aws

Yet, there are many who believe over turning Roe was the right decision. Some, like anti-abortion advocate Marie Coyle of Glen Cove believed abortion simply dis missed the potential and value for human life.“I think we’re tampering in areas that we should not,” Coyle said. “You can con trol your body before, but once you have a child within you, you can’t control that, it’s left to God.”

The Rev. Roger Williams of First Bap tist Church of Glen Cove believes in the sanctity of life, but is politically proabortion. Williams is not in favor of the atmosphere surrounding Roe, however, believing the movement too politically motivated.“Idon’t want to sound like I’m making a judgment against individuals who are pro-life and anti-abortion, but I don’t see that movement being completely con cerned with life all together,” he said.

Williams believes for and against abortion have been very harsh to women, and refuse to provide an adequate sup port system for mothers and children after birth.

With the repeal of Roe v. Wade still fresh in many minds, restrictions on abor tions found in local municipal codes are being rediscovered again across several Long Island municipalities — laws some fear could create blueprints for future restrictions.Thelaws

HERALD—202215,Septemebr 8

“We should stand up for women by repealing these unjust barriers to abor tion care,” Kaplan said, “and finally send

“Restricting access affects overall safety, as well as men tal and physical health,” she said.Mehra believes access to abortion is crucial to the overall wellbeing of a woman’s health.

Stilliti did reassure the crowd, however, the state legislature has ensured a wom an’s right to choose was protected, and encouraged local municipalities to pass similar

“Thererules.are those running for office right now trying to repeal these efforts,” Stilliti said. “As a proud pro-choice elected official, we have to make sure every loop hole is closed, and closed tight.”Kaplan expressed her con cerns over what she described as the U.S. Supreme Court’s reckless decision to hinder constitutional rights. She believes it’s the responsibility of legislators like her to fight for rights at every level of gov ernment, stressing that there are people who will use politi cal discourse to restrict the rights of women.

At a news conference in front of the Nassau County Courthouse last week, local officials joined pro-abortion activists to condemn these laws. State Sen. Anna Kaplan and Assemblywoman Gina Sillitti were joined by Sen. John Brooks, Assem blywomen Judy Griffin and Taylor Dar ling, as well as some council members

Drury, a mother to two young boys, says she refuses to raise her children where access to reproductive health care is restricted.“Nowwith abortion rights under attack, we need to keep New York a safe place for reproductive care and get rid of these draconian laws.”

“The reassurance of access cultivates a relationship of honesty between health care professionals and the public,” she added.Abortion restrictions in the Town of North Hempstead were adopted in late 1971, a year after the state senate legalized abortion up to the 24th week of pregnancy, and two years before the U.S. Supreme Court’s ruling on Roe v. Wade.

By roKSana amiD ramid@liherald.com

— written before the famous 1973 decision that rendered them moot — have turned up in the towns of Hemp stead, Oyster Bay and Huntington, as well as the villages of Freeport and Wil liston Park. The laws restrict abortion access of any kind — including medica tion-based, non-surgical procedures — and require abortions to occur only in a hospitalThosesetting.foundviolating these laws could have been subject to jail time and fines. While state law is in place protecting pro cedures to end pregnancies, some local officials say these old restrictions would have effectively outlawed abortion clinics like those run by Planned Parenthood while adding barriers to women accessing specific kinds of health care.

Will Sheeline/Herald

Some are urging lawmakers repeal of restrictive abortion statutes found in five Long Island municipalities. They suggest these restrictive laws set a precedent for future restrictions to abortion access. Those who violate these laws could face jail time and fines.

According to tax-rates.org, the median property tax bill in Nassau County is $8,711 per year, for a home with the coun ty’s median value of $487,900. Nassau col lects, on average, 1.79 percent of a proper ty’s assessed fair market value as property tax.The website also states that the average yearly property tax paid by Nassau resi dents is just over 8 percent of their annual income.Both Republicans and Democrats in the

highest-taxing counties in the nation,” Abrahams said. “And we thought this would be the perfect time to be able to pro videLaterrelief.”that day, during a legislative meet ing, the two pieces of legislation got the votes they needed.

There are two bills that allow the exemptions, one for those who are disabled and earn up to $58,400, and one for seniors who meet the income requirements.

By MALLORY WILSON mwilson@liherald.com

At a news conference on Sept. 7, the Legislature’s minority leader, Democrat Kevan Abrahams, urged his Republican colleagues to expand the income caps, say ing that the legislation was more impor tant than ever, with people still struggling and still recovering from the coronavirus pandemic. “Nassau County is one of the

State Legislature voted for the new income eligibility, Democratic Sen. Kevin Thomas said at the news conference. “This is some thing that both sides agree on,” he said. “Failing to adopt these measures in Nas sau County will leave vulnerable residents without the crucial relief they are entitled to andRepublicandeserve.”

The unanimous vote, on Sept. 7, raised the income cap from $34,000 to $58,400 for the lowest percentage of exemption, and from $20,000 to $50,000 for the 50 percent exemption.Aspokesman for County Executive Bruce Blakeman said that he would sign theThebill. change in the law came after Gov. Kathy Hochul signed state legislation on Aug. 8 authorizing counties like Nassau to opt into the new, higher-income eligibility levels. The county legislation would give Nassau County the same income caps as New York City.

ON Sept. 7, the County Legislature’s minority leader, Democrat Kevan Abrahams, urged his Republican colleagues to expand the income caps for seniors and the disabled that would allow them to be partially exempt from their property tax assessments. Later that day, the Legislature voted to approve the increased income caps.

9 202215,Septemebr—HERALDSQUARE/ELMONTFRANKLIN 1184175

Legislature votes to expand tax exemptions

Under the current income require ments, 9,000 households are benefiting from exemptions, according to Abrahams, who added that that number could double once the new income caps are put in place.

County Legislator Tom McKevitt said it was only fair that Nassau seniors and those with disabilities get the same relief as those in New York City. “We found that especially with the cost of liv ing in Nassau County, especially with higher property taxes in Nassau as com pared to New York City, “ McKevitt said, “it would only be fair if there was equity between the taxpayers in Nassau and those in New York City. Especially for those seniors trying to get relief in order to keep theirMcKevitthomes.”said that he had some constit uents who benefited from the maximum exemptions.“Iamproud to sign these bills to put money back in the pockets of New York homeowners and help seniors and families stay in their homes,” Hochul said in a statement on Aug. 8. “With inflation and rising costs putting a strain on families nationwide, this legislation will help to ensure that New Yorkers — from seniors to first-time homebuyers — get some muchneeded relief. I thank the bill sponsors for getting this legislation over the finish line, and for their partnership in our mission to keep New York affordable.”

Mallory Wilson/Herald

After a vote in the County Legislature, Nassau seniors and disabled people who earn up to $58,400 can expect to be exempt from at least 5 percent of their property tax assessments. Those who earn less, a maximum of $50,000 annually, can antici pate being 50 percent exempt.

Thursday, Sept. 15

Boys Soccer: Hewlett at Calhoun 5 p.m.

Football: Plainedge at Carey 2 p.m.

Girls Soccer: Hewlett at V.S. North 4:45 p.m.

ack-to-back seasons ensconced at the top after almost two title-less decades have made Carey reluctant to entertain the idea of possible slip page – even as the Nassau Conference A2 boys’ soccer reigning co-champion flips back to the start of a reset cycle.

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Senior returning starters Dante Val verde and Christian Russo – each of whom tallied twice last season – head Car ey’s midfield, with newcomer Dominick Camuti and fellow senior Alejandro Aviles (two goals) at first-string center back and wing, respectively. “Our returning mid fielders, Dante and Christian, are smart, and both can also get involved in attacks.”

Football: Garden City at South Side 6 p.m.

Football: Roosevelt at Hewlett 6 p.m.

Girls Soccer: Sewanhaka at Elmont 4:30 p.m.

to have someone just as talented in Vasili os,” Princi said. “He’s been impressive, last year and in tryouts. Looking forward to having him for three years.”

SPOTLIGHT ATHLETE

Friday, Sept. 16

Saturday, Sept. 17

The defending champion Seahawks squad (4-0 Conference A3 spring 2021) that bolted 11-0 last autumn and took its first loss in its regular-season finale – finishing 12-2 overall as a Nassau Class A quarterfi nalist, both its losses coming against even tual county Class A champion Garden City – has been drastically whittled, with eight starters, each an award-winner, graduating this past June.

Succeeding All-County goalkeeper and Seahawks captain Gino Cervoni – now at Hofstra – is six-foot sophomore Vasilios Dallas coming off a fine junior varsity showing. “We consider ourselves lucky, after graduating a Division 1 goalkeeper,

GAMES TO WATCH

Still, 17th-year coach Matt Princi –whose club this fall competes in the new the 11-team Conference A West – said Carey isn’t planning on being nudged from its perch. “The goal is to stay on top,” Princi said. “It’s hard to get there, like we have, and not want to stay there. This new group picked up a lot from last year’s group. They’ve been training a lot on their own all summer. They’re not listening to everyone who’s saying it’s a rebuilding year. Nobody’s using the word ‘rebuild’ in our locker Permittingroom.”only eight goals last season – three off the league lead and 10 fewer than the next-ranked team, third-place Glen Cove – the Seahawks’ defense ranked second in A2. Back to shepherd Carey’s new backfield through its orientation phase is senior All-Conference defender Jason Malovich, playing alongside firstyear-starting backs Daniel Stepien and Jon-Demir Kalmaz, both six-foot-plus juniors. “Jason’s our fastest player,” Prin ci said. “He’s a tough defender and can also lead an attack. Teams have to slide over to cover him, which opens things up.”

BRINGING LOCAL SPORTS HOME EVERY WEEK HERALD SPORTS

JOSUE ASCENCIO CUEVA Baldwin Junior Soccer

Senior Jose Rojas becomes a starting Seahawks winger, with sophomore Giovanni Astaiza – returning from a

COMING OFF AN All-County campaign that saw him post six shutouts and allow more than one goal just once in 15 games while helping the Bruins to a first-place regular-season finish, Ascencio Cueva was the Nassau Conference AA Goalkeeper of the Year. He’s a third-year starter with eight career shutouts and Baldwin’s biggest asset and director of traffic in the defensive zone.

Girls Soccer: East Meadow at Baldwin 5 p.m.

Boys Soccer: Mepham at MacArthur 5 p.m.

Football: Seaford at V.S. South 2 p.m.

By GARRETT D. URIBE sports@liherald.com

Girls Soccer: Mepham at South Side 11 a.m.

Football: Uniondale at Baldwin 2 p.m.

B

Football: Farmingdale at Oceanside 6 p.m.

Football: Elmont at Kennedy 4:15 p.m.

Boys Soccer: Freeport at Oceanside 5 p.m.

Football: Sewanhaka at Long Beach 2 p.m.

Field Hockey: Seafrod at East Meadow 5 p.m.

Boys Soccer: South Side at Lawrence 4:30 p.m.

Football: MacArthur at Mepham 2 p.m.

year’s hiatus – and 6-foot-3 junior Mace lin Buja Jr. rounding out Carey’s firststring attack. “Jose, coming off the bench, was a big part of what we did last year,” Princi said. “He moves well and can finish in front of the net. Giovanni’s crafty with the ball. Macelin’s a big kid we just want to find in the box and get his head on the ball.”

“Once we establish that team chemis try,” Princi added, “we’ll be tough to beat. Our goal, as always, is to line up against opponents, and beat them.”

Boys Soccer: V.S. South at Lynbrook 4:30 p.m.

Media Origin Inc.

SENIOR DANTE VALVERDE is one of few returning starters for the Seahawks, who won a dozen games last season and reached the Class A quarterfinals.

Football: Freeport at East Meadow 2 p.m.

Girls Volleyball: West Hemp. at East Meadow 11:45 a.m.

Off 12-win season, Carey retools

In non-league action, Carey defeated visiting Valley Stream North, 2-1, in the opener Sept. 8.

11 202215,Septemebr—HERALDSQUARE/ELMONTFRANKLIN TO SPONSOR OR EXHIBIT Contact Amy Amato at aamato@liherald.com or 516.569.4000 x224 TO RSVP Contact Sabrina Greenberg at sgreenberg@liherald.com or 516.569.4000 x219 FREE Valet Parking FREE Refreshments & Light Bites* FREE Senior ID cards courtesy of Town of Hempstead Office TownClerk FREE Health Screenings FREE Hearing Screenings *first come first serve* Antique Specialist to evaluate your Shoppingitems COME TO THE FREE OCTOBERTHURSDAY13• 2022 10:00AM – 1:00PM Temple Beth Am of Merrick 2377 Merrick Ave, Merrick, NY 11566 GIFT BAG SPONSOR: GUEST SPEAKERS+ FREEBAGS*GOODIE *while supplies last REFRESHMENT SPONSOR: Register richnerlive.com/seniorexpoat PRESENTED BY: GOLD SPONSOR: SILVER SPONSOR: DON’T MISS YOUR CHANCE TO WIN TONS OF PRIZES GIVEAWAYS*AND *must be present at drawing to win* 1185254

Dr. Adhi Sharma, president Mount Sinai South Nassau, said planning for the J Wing Patient Pavilion began in 2018 after learning neighbors in and around Oceanside were seeking cardiac proce dures over the river in Manhattan.

Mount Sinai places one last steel beam

New patient pavilion includes 40 beds for critical care

“When we partnered with Mount Sinai in 2018, we shared our goal to grow our cardiac program at this hospital,” Shar ma said. “In supporting that goal, they’ve worked with us toward expanding cardiac services at the hospital including — openheart surgery, expanded structural heart programs and electrophysiology.”

CoNstRuCtIoN woRkERs saL Gustella and Curran Digney sign their names onto the final beam steel beam of the J Wing Patient Pavilion as part of its topping out ceremony last week at Mount Sinai South Nassau in Oceanside. The pavilion will open in 2024.

HERALDSQUARE/ELMONTFRANKLIN—202215,Septemebr 12

“The challenge for us as board mem bers was to figure out how we’d be rele vant in the new world of health care,” Fennessy said. “We realized we need to be an institution that performs more tertia ry-type work — like open-heart surgery — things that are more complex, to meet the needs of South Shore residents.”

It’s a tradition dating back to some of the earliest days of modern construction. When a building is almost completed, the builders celebrate its construction by placing the last steel beam at the highest point in what’s known as a “topping out” ceremony.Mount Sinai South Nassau upheld this custom with its own topping out ceremo ny last week, celebrating the completion of the four-story J Wing Patient Pavilion at Oceanside’s One Healthy Way. More than 40 people — including board mem bers, construction workers and other staff members — gathered for photos with the final steel beam of the building’s construction.Attendees — clad with white hard hats — signed their names onto the beam, and cheered when it was hooked to a crane and hoisted up to the top of the building, where it was placed securely.

Tim Baker/Herald photos

The patient pavilion’s construction is part of a Federal Emergency Manage ment Agency project as a result of the

Joseph Fennessy, immediate past chair of Mount Sinai South Nassau’s board of directors, says the medical group needed to consider where the health care industry was going. A lot of what hospitals traditionally provided was becoming part of services now taking place in the offices of physicians and ambulatory surgery centers.

The steel beam was adorned with an American flag on one end, a small tree on the other, and a large Mount Sinai banner draped in the middle. Damian Becker, Mount Sinai South Nassau’s public rela tions manager, said the tree represents the fact there were no injuries or acci dents on the job site, and traditionally, is supposed to stay in place.

Theout.pandemic did slow the pavilion’s construction, however, thanks to both ill ness and supply chain issues. What was supposed to have been opened by now is now expected to start serving South Shore patients in 2024.

The patient pavilion will feature an extended emergency department, add 40 new beds for critical care patients, and nine modern surgical suites under one roof. Joe Calderone, a spokesman for Mount Sinai, said the operating rooms would be large enough to potentially pro

The beam was placed up past the fourth floor and toward the back, said Mark Brundage, a sales and operations worker for JC Steel, who created the beam. Even so, its tree was still visible from Nassau Road.

It was a celebration at the new J Wing Patient Pavilion at Mount Sinai South Nassau in Oceanside last week as hospital and construction leaders gathered to celebrate the raising of the final steel beam. The $113 million facility is expected to welcome its first patients in 2024.

“Currently we need a certificate of need from the New York State Depart ment of Health,” Calderone said. “But providing open-heart surgery to our patients is the goal.”

By aNDRE sILVa asilva@liherald.com

flooding and damage that occurred at the Long Beach Medical Center following Hurricane Sandy. In all, FEMA is provid ing $113 million to the project — part of an overall $158 million in funding that also includes the Long Beach Medical Center.“We used some of the FEMA money in the Long Beach Medical Center, and some of it here to strengthen our campus,” Calderone said.

Mount Sinai’s operating rooms are fully functional and viable facilities, the spokesman added, but open-heart surgery and other cardiac procedures require larger rooms to accommodate all neces sary equipment — which the new patient pavilion will provide. Standard operating rooms of this scale require 250 square feet, but the J Wing Pavilion will provide operating rooms of up to 600 square feet.

vide open-heart surgery and other cardi ac services — if approved.

This building would make Mount Sinai the only hospital on the South Shore to offer cardiac services, Sharma added, assuming it’s approved by the health department. The pavilion would also be a boon for the hospital if another global pandemic were to occur in the future.

The hospital has learned many new techniques to optimize exposure and infection prevention within the hospital following the pandemic, Sharma said. For example, all emergency treatment areas are now built as single rooms with hard walls — instead of curtains — to prevent the spread of disease. The air filtration system is designed such that each patient has clean air coming in from the outside in their rooms, while hospital air is fil tered

By Karen Bloom

Sunday, Sept. 18, 9 a.m. to 6 p.m. $10 per person; children younder than 16 free. Nickerson Beach, Lido Boulevard, Lido Beach. For more information, visit NassauAOH Feis.com.

browned. Cover edge of crust with foil if crust is browning too quickly. Cool. OUT

Apple season is peaking now, but there’s still time to pick through mid October, according to area growers. Growers are producing more of the varieties that everyone loves — including the classics McIntosh and Empire, returning favorites Gala and Honeycrisp, and other popular choices: Zestar, Jonamac and Macoun. Zestar is an early-season apple that’s juicy, with a light and crisp texture.

• 1/2 cup (57g) diced pecans or walnuts,

• 2 tablespoons (43g) boiled cider, optional but good

Classic Apple Crisp

• 1 teaspoon cinnamon

Also consider newer varieties such as RubyFrost, SnapDragon and SweeTango. The RubyFrost’s blend of sweet and tart flavors and its crisp texture make it a great choice for eating as-is, and for use in baking salads and sauces.

The sweet juicy SnapDragon is characterized by a “monster crunch.” One of its parents is the Honeycrisp, and you’ll love the spicy/sweet flavor. Honeycrisp has also given us SweeTango, characterized by its crunchy sweet flavor.

To make the topping, whisk together the flour, oats, salt, sugar, cinnamon and baking

Spread the topping over the apples in the Setpan.the pan on a parchment or foillined cookie sheet, to catch any potential drips. Bake for about 60 minutes, until bubbling and top is golden brown.

Those short-lived delights of the season have arrived: juicy, crisp apples, sweet cider, harvest fairs — and, of course, some pumpkins along the way. Apple picking awaits, and is well underway at Long Island’s “u-pick” orchards.

• 1/4 cup (57g) rum, apple cider or juice, or water

• 1/4 teaspoon salt

Remove to cool for at least 20 minutes before serving. If you serve the crisp hot/ warm, it may be quite soft; you wait till it’s completely cool, it’ll firm up nicely.

• 2 tablespoons (28g) butter, melted

• 1/4 teaspoon salt

• Pastry for a 2 crust deep-dish 9-inch pie

Preheat oven to 425° F. Prepare pastry. In large bowl, combine sugars, flour and cinnamon.Addapples and cranberries. Mix to coat well. Turn into prepared pie pan. Dot with butter. Cover with second crust and seal to bottom crust edge by pressing edges together, then flute. Cut slits in top crust. Bake 40 to 45 minutes until crust is lightly

• 1 1/2 teaspoons apple pie spice, or 1 teaspoon cinnamon + 1/4 teaspoon nutmeg + 1/4 teaspoon ginger

Topping:

Fall’s Best Apple Cranberry Pie

• 4 cups sliced, pared tart apples (thickly

Venture forth to a nearby apple orchard

Once you get home with your bounty, make some delicious apple treats.

Filling:

• 3 tablespoons (20g) unbleached allpurpose flour or tapioca flour

• 1/4 to 3/4 cup (53g to 159g) light brown sugar or 1/4 cup (53g) dark brown sugar, depending on the sweetness/tartness of your apples

What could be funnier than celebrities reading heartfelt writings of other celebrities? That’s the premise behind the popular ‘docu-theater’ comedy show or25A,Arts,TillesSaturday,thetorndroppingDayleandcomedywith(‘Flashdance:Mrs.CarolineDonovanJust‘SexKai’),(nowSusanfeaturesmemoirs.bringinternationalAutobiography.”“CelebrityInthishit,performerstolifeactualcelebrityThecurrenteditionLongIslands’ownLucciandRalphMacchiointheNetflixhit‘CobraplusMarioCantone(ofandtheCity’and‘AndLikeThat’fame),Tate(‘TheOC,’‘Damages’),Aaron(‘TheMarvelousMaisel’),JuliaMacchioTheMusical’),‘SaturdayNightLive’legendAlanZweibelcreatorsEugenePackandReyfel.Theyactoutjaw-vignettesinspiredandstraightfromthepagesofmostunforgettabletell-alls.Sept.17,7p.m.$75.CenterforthePerformingC.W.PostCampus,RouteBrookville.(516)299-3100TillesCenter.org.

13 202215,Septemebr—HERALDSQUARE/ELMONTFRANKLIN

iteintofall

• 1/2 cup (45g) quick-cooking oats

• 2/3 cup (142g) light brown sugar or dark brown sugar, packed

The Nassau County Board of the Ancient Order of Hibernians once again welcomes fall with its annual AOH Feis & Festival. You don’t need to be Irish to enjoy this most traditional celebration of Irish dance, music, piping, drumming, language and athletics. The 18th century tradition lives on in Nassau County, with competitions of dance and piping, Gaelic games for children, and much more, including a performance by Harpers Ferry. Bring a picnic lunch and settle in for the day, ready to experience the age-old traditions that are showcased at this fascinating event.

Note: To make individual crisps, grease eight 8-ounce capacity baking dishes, and proceed with the recipe accordingly

oven to 350° F. Grease a 9-by9-inch square cake pan, or similar-size casserole pan.

Addpowder.thecold butter, working it in to make an unevenly crumbly mixture. Stir in the nuts, if you’re using them.

Slice the apples about 1/4-inch thick. Toss them with the remaining filling ingredients, and spread them in the pan.

sliced) • 2 cups fresh cranberries • 3/4 cup brown sugar • 1/4 cup sugar • 1/3 cup all-purpose flour • 1 teaspoon cinnamon • 2 tablespoons butter

AOH Feis & Festival

optionalPreheat

• 3/4 cup (90g) unbleached all-purpose flour

• 3 pounds apples, to yield 2 pounds peeled, cored, and sliced apples; about 9 cups

• 3/4 teaspoon baking powder

the smaller crisps for 45 to 55 minutes.

AutobiographyCelebrity

• 8 tablespoons (113g) butter, cold, cut in pats

Learn the A, B, C, D’s of all Giuffre.CountyEdbyThe571-6208areRoad.Library,FranklinCoverageMedicareattheSquarePublic16LincolnReservationsrequired;call(516)toregister.eventissponsoredNYSAssemblymanRaandNassauLegislatorJohn

THE SCENE

Your Neighborhood

Vettes & Jets Annual Car Show at the American Airpower Museum

Art has access to worlds beyond the one we know. Explore the next dimension as seen through eyes of artists throughout the centuries, at Nassau County Museum of Art’s current exhibition, “Other Worlds than This: The Supernatural in Art,” now through Nov. 6. The exhibit summons a celestial realm of demons, ghosts and extra-sensory phenomena as conjured by such Surrealists as Dalí, photographers who specialize in the occult, Old Masters including Goya, contemporary talents including Betye Saar, Luc Tuymans, Michaël Borremans and many others. Nassau County Museum of Art, 1 Museum Dr., Roslyn Harbor. (516) 484-9337 or NassauMuseum.org.

Support local families at happy hour

Support the Franklin Squarebased home-building nonprofit Rescuing Families at their Happy Hour Fundraiser for their renovation of the Solinto family home in Malverne. The happy hour takes place Saturday, Sept. 24, 4.-7 p.m., at Connolly Station, 280 Hempstead Ave., in Malverne. Ticket price includes beer/wine/soda, hot appetizers and door prize raffle entry. There will also be raffle baskets and a 50/50. You do not have to be present to win. Donations can be made to Rescuing Families via Venmo @ Rescuing-Families or directly on the nonprofit’s RescuingFamilies.org.website,

Don’t miss American Airpower Museum’s event, Sunday, Sept. 18, 230 New Hwy., Farmingdale, a showcase of classic and modern Corvettes. Owners wishing to display their cars should meet at 8:30 a.m. in front of Gold & Meyer’s Deli at Airport Plaza in Farmingdale, to line up and then caravan to the museum. $30 car entry fee, includes admission for driver and passenger. Regular admission for adults is $15, $12 for seniors and veterans, and $10 for kids 5 to 12. Any questions or concerns, contact (631) 293-6398.

HERALDSQUARE/ELMONTFRANKLIN—202215,Septemebr 14 WEDNESDAY ◆ NOVEMBER 16 ◆ 6:00 PM The Heritage Club at Bethpage RichnerLIVE’s 2nd annual R.E.A.L. Awards will spotlight entrepreneurs, professionals, and visionaries in Long Island’s real estate industry who have achieved success in their respective roles while also involved in community contributions and advocacy. NOMINATIONS NOW OPEN Visit richnerlive.com/nominateRICHNER are needed to see this picture. Produced by: Connect. Collaborate. Celebrate! 1185700

The Sixties Show

On exhibit

Step back to the ‘60s at NYCB Theatre at Westbury, 960 Brush Hollow Rd., Westbury, with the energetic band who bring you their Sixties Show, Saturday, Sept. 24, 8 p.m. These dynamic musicians are known for re-creating spot on, note for note re-creations of the hits, B-sides and deep album cuts from the greatest songs of the era that defined a generation. The concert experience includes a full multi-media production with time travel special effects, narration, 60s archival audio and newsreel footage and a light show. For information/tickets, visit TheTheatreAtWestbury.com or LiveNation.com or call (516) 247-5200.

madeMedicareclear

SEPT. 24

The Community League of Garden City South generally meets the first Wednesday of every month at 7:30 p.m., at the Veterans of Foreign Wars Post 2718, at 68 Lincoln Rd., in Franklin Square. All living and operating businesses within Franklin Square School District No. 17 are welcome. There will be light refreshments and a free raffle for all who attend.

Grab your lunch and join MuseumCountyNassauof

Art Docent Riva Ettus for her popular “Brown Bag Lecture” live, via Zoom, Thursday, Oct. 13, 1 p.m. She’ll discuss the current exhibition, “Other Worlds than This: The Supernatural in Art.” Participants are invited to ask questions at the end of the program. Register at least 24 hours in advance to receive the program Zoom link. Nassau County Museum of Art, 1 Museum Dr., Roslyn Harbor. (516) 484-9337 or NassauMuseum.org.

Having an event?

Joins the Rotary at Venus Restaurant and on Zoom, with guest speaker Jim Banish of NYLEAP. All are invited to attend.

Community League general meeting

15 202215,Septemebr—HERALDSQUARE/ELMONTFRANKLIN 1183588 A CHILD’S LIFE IS FLASHING BEFORE YOUR EYES Every day in NYS up to 50,000 cars unlawfully pass stopped school buses* School Bus Safety Program is keeping our students safe by equipping school buses with automated enforcement technology throughout Hempstead. Endangering children by unlawfully passing a stopped school bus will lead to a violation. *Source: NYS Governor’s Traffic Safety Committee STOP FOR THE SCHOOL BUS. IT’S NEW YORK STATE LAW. For more info visit: stopforthebus.com/hempstead #stopforthebus

Join Giving Back To Community at a fundraising dinner to support community efforts to assist the food insecure, Thursday, Sept. 29, 6-10:30 p.m. Proceeds from the event, at The Inn at New Hyde Park, 214 Jericho Tpke., New Hyde Park, will be used to support the opening of a food pantry in Elmont. $100 ticket includes dinner, entertainment, raffles and giveaways. For information, contact Emilian or Marlene at (516) 612-4000 or visit GivingBackToCommunity. org.

SEP.T 22

Breast FundraiserinHotlineCancerDrive-MovieNight

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.Art

Fight FundraiserHunger

Come and enjoy the annual Fall Festival, Saturday, Oct. 1, 10 a.m.-4 p.m., at the Franklin Square Historical Museum, 861 Naple Ave. It will include a garage sale, food, pumpkins, plants, raffles, and other activities for the kids. The rain date is schedule for Oct. 2.

Enjoy “A League of Their Own,” the 1992 comedy drama starring Geena Davis, Madonna and Tom Hanks, about the World War II-era baseballprofessionalAll-Americanwomen’sleague,Friday, Sept. 23, 6:30 p.m.; movie 7 p.m. The fundraising event, at University’sAdelphiparking lot 5, 1 South Ave., Garden City, supports Adelphi’s Breast Cancer Hotline. Admission is $45 per car; advance purchase required. Light refreshments are included with the ticket. For more information and to purchase tickets, visit ly/3zOlDu5.Cancer.Adelphi.edu/au_event/movie-night-fundraiser-baseballBreast-orbit.

The groovy Woodstock era comes alive when Retro69 performs their Woodstock Revival show, Sunday, Sept. 18, noon-3 p.m., at Crossroads Farm at Grossmans, 480 Hempstead Ave., Malverne. A tribute to the 53rd anniversary of the famed festival, the band covers all the music, including, Richie Havens, Sweetwater, Bert Sommer, Tim Hardin, Melanie, Arlo Guthrie, Joan Baez, Joe McDonald, John Sebastian, Keef Hartley Band, Santana, Canned Heat, Grateful Dead, Mountain, CCR, Janis Joplin, Sly & The Family Stone, The Who, Jefferson Airplane, Joe Cocker, Ten Years After, Crosby, Stills, Nash & Young, and so much more. The free event will be under a tent, rain or shine. For information, contact (516) 881-7900.

Oct. 13

Retro69’s Woodstock Revival

Central Nassau County meetingRotary

Zoom information: Meeting ID: 873 8292 4133, passcode 597984, then dial your location +1 646 558 8656 US (New York).

talk

Franklin HistoricalSquareSociety Fall Festival

Where health officials once considered mask-wearing a must for those traveling in densely ridden, close-con tact spaces like trains, buses and subways to curb the spread of the virus that causes Covid-19, Hochul argued her policy shift keeps in step with the latest health data, and high vaccination rates.

At least one of three safeguards are currently in the MTA’s control: ventilation. It’s by no means a cure-all for stopping the spread of Covid-19, but high-quality ventila tion reduces the concentration of coronavirus particles in the air.

It’s a health provision that, according to spokesman Tim Minton, the MTA has fortified.

But some public health experts — like Dr. Bruce Hirsch of the Zucker School of Medicine at Hofstra and Northwell — are concerned the call to make masks optional may have come too soon. Especially as winter approaches.Whilethe spread of the virus has stabilized, one omi cron subvariant considered the virus’ most contagious strain to date, “is pretty good at sidestepping from immu nity and causing infection, even in people who have been infected before and vaccinated,” Hirsch said. “And I think that this will increase the amount of transmission and increase the amount of Covid infection in our area if large numbers of us are going without a mask.”

Despite Hochul’s change, free masks will continue to be available to anyone who requests one, Minton said. The MTA says it’s distributed 56 million free masks since the beginning of the pandemic — more than 60,000 per day on Hirschaverage.says

it’s important, however, for riders to remember they aren’t the only ones traveling.

Masks now encouraged, but not required

“We’re in a far different place than we had been,” Hochul said. “We are seeing major declines in hospital izations. We have to restore some normalcy to our lives.”

By JUAN LASSO jlasso@liherald.com

“Please wear a mask, out of courtesy and in solidarity with those people whose health is immune-compro mised.”

After more than two years, Long Island Rail Road com muters can now decide for themselves when — and where — to mask up while riding the rails. At least, officially.

Michael Hinman/Herald file

“Fresh air replaces the air in LIRR train cars once every five minutes,” Minton said, in a statement. “Air fil ters are in the process of being upgraded,” said Minton in aRoughlystatement.athird of the air traveling through the car is fresh air pulled from above the roof of each car where two units of heating, ventilation and air-conditioning systems are mounted. A key advantage of the LIRR is its many stations — 124 in total — that allows for cars to reg ularly slide open doors and let in fresh air.

transmission on public transportation, “especially where specific safeguards are in place — such as face coverings, well-functioning ventilation systems, and minimal talking by riders.”

HERALDSQUARE/ELMONTFRANKLIN—202215,Septemebr 16

instituting their own mask mandate, but as of early this week, haven’t taken any such steps. Instead, they pointed to a 2020 study conducted for the American Public Trans portation Association that found no inflated risk of virus

GOv. KAthy hOchUL announced last week the end of the mask mandate on public transportation — including busses and subways in New York City, as well as the Long Island Rail Road — shedding a requirement first instituted at the height of the coronavirus pandemic more than two years ago, which has been largely ignored over the last several months anyway.

MTA officials wouldn’t say if they would consider

Gov. Kathy Hochul lifted the state-imposed mask man date last week, which was put in place by her predeces sor, Gov. Andrew Cuomo, at the height of the coronavi rus pandemic in early 2020. The move affects not only the LIRR, but also the rest of the Metropolitan Transporta tion Authority, including New York City buses and sub ways, as well as the Metro-North Railroad.

“I’m imploring people to remember that there are friends, neighbors and loved ones in our immediate vicinity who may be older, who may have a weakened immune system, who may be required to take medica tions that diminish their immune response,” he said.

Since 2011 Rockville Centre Auto Repair has offered quality automotive services. Started by Kevin Killea, this shop specializes in general maintenance and automotive repairs with extra expertise with Jaguars and BMWs. For nearly a decade Rockville Centre Auto Repair strives to offer great service at affordable prices.

REV UP YOUR ENGINES WITH LONG ISLAND’S BEST IN VEHICLES & SERVICES www.lichoiceawards.com

BEST OIL CHANGE:

By combining speed, comfort and excellence, BMW of Freeport can offer an everyday vehicle that can take you to work, pick up the kids and everything in between. Wander the showroom, and enjoy complimentary wifi, coffee, water and snacks. Servicing your vehicle is made easy via app, which enables pick-up and delivery from your driveway. Plus a free car wash and vacuum!

Visit

17 202215,Septemebr—HERALDSQUARE/ELMONTFRANKLIN

BEST PRE-OWNED CAR DEALER BEST FOREIGN AUTO DEALER: Jaguar Freeport 146 W Sunrise Hwy, Freeport (516) www.jaguarfreeport.com771-9700

47 W Merrick Rd, Freeport (516) www.freeportmarine.com379-2610

The always stocked shelves and wide selection of quality products at the family operated Freeport Maine Supply is one of the many reasons why they’ve been around since 1939. Started by Arthur Ross who opened the company which has a staff that boasts over 150 years in the marine industry as a fisherman, certified mechanic, fiberglass repairman and so much more! It’s easy to order what you need, shipping is fast, get help from knowledgeable staff and low prices for quality

BEST AUTO GLASS REPAIR:

from September 15 - October 9 to nominate your favorite businesses for 2022! THE WEEKLY LIST: 1185723

BEST BOAT/MARINE DEALER:

The Tire Town Tire Pros strives to make your tire and auto experience hassle-free. They put customers first and always explain everything in a way that’s easy to understand. They do extensive research so they can provide you with facts and reliable information and dependable products and services.

BEST AUTO REPAIR - INDEPENDENT

BEST AUTOBODY/COLLISION

410 Long Beach Blvd, Long Beach (516) www.friendlysautocenter.com889-5252

236 N Long Beach Rd, Rockville Centre (516) www.tiretownusa.com766-3008

Freeport Marine Supply

BEST LUXURY AUTO DEALERSHIP:

BEST MOTORCYCLE DEALER: Harley-Davidson of Nassau County 2428 Sunrsise Hwy, Bellmore (516) www.nassaucountyharleydavidson.com409-9200

Rockville Centre Auto Repair

BEST TIRE CENTER:

The new state-of-the-art showroom has stunning vehicles on display at this dealership. They are a frequent winner of the prestigious Pride of Jaguar award. Enjoy fresh coffee, continental breakfast and wifi in their waiting room, or if you’re in need of a service, visit their climate controlled service drive thru. Financing options are also available so you can drive away with the car you desire.

Tire Town Tire Pros

BEST AUTO DEALER SERVICE DEPT. BEST DOMESTIC AUTO DEALER Crown Ford, Inc. 420 Merrick Rd, Lynbrook (516) www.crownfordlynbrook.com599-0600

Friendly Auto and Body

291 W Sunrise Hwy, Freeport (631) www.bmwoffreeport.com283-0888

Metroproducts.Creative

BMW of Freeport

The service team at Friendly Auto and Body is trained on state-of-the-art equipment in order to offer the community exceptional service. For your convenience, they can pick up and deliver your vehicle. Full engine services and auto body repair, as well as 24/7 emergency services are also available.

This authorized Harley-Davidson dealership has a large selection of new and pre-owned models. They provide clients with helpful and friendly customer service, have a professional sales team to assist you in finding the perfect ride, finance experts so you can have the vehicle you want, precise service technicians and a parts and accessories staff.

131 N Park Ave (516) www.rvcautorepair.com431-4671

Whether you’re looking to purchase, finance or service a new or pre-owned vehicle, Crown Ford in Lynbrook will help you every step of the way. They take great pride in providing great customer service and care, while making your visit an enjoyable and positive experience. You have freedom to explore the showroom and vehicles, while getting relevant and clear information about the car, payment and more.

HERALDSQUARE/ELMONTFRANKLIN—202215,Septemebr 18 Subscribe today to stay up-to-date on all youimportantthenewsneedtoknow: • Local schools • High school sports • Town and governmentcounty • Shopping, dining and more! real local, real news. I FRANKLIN SQUARE AND ELMONT Sign up today and get 3 months FREE! Use promo code: GUIDE22. Go to liherald.com/subscribe Select the FRANKLIN SQUARE / ELMONT HERALD from the list and enter promo code: GUIDE22 to get 3 months FREE! - Questions? Call us at 516-569-4000 x7 Hurry, this limited time offer ends on 11/30/22 Note: Offer good on our auto pay option only. Your credit card will be automatically charged $9.75 after the 3 FREE months and every quarter after that.

Public Notices

be maintained or there are other health or safety concerns, the Court Appointed Referee will cancel the sale.

Pursuant to judgment of foreclosure and sale entered June 13, 2022, I will sell at public auction on the North Side steps of the Nassau Supreme Court, 100 Supreme Court Drive, Mineola, NY on October 5, 2022 at 2:00 p.m. prem. k/a 561 Oakley Avenue, Elmont, NY 11003 a/k/a Section 32, Block 546, Lot 26-27.

People named in Crime Watch items as having been arrested and charged with violations or crimes are only suspected of committing those acts of which they are accused. They are all presumed to be innocent of those charges until and unless found guilty in a court of law.

-

DEUTSCHE BANK NATIONAL TRUST COMPANY, AS TRUSTEE FOR CARRINGTON MORTGAGE LOAN TRUST, SERIES 2005-FRE1 ASSET-BACKED PASSTHROUGH CERTIFICATES, Pltf. vs. JOSEPH J. LASALA, et al, Defts. Index #003762/2017.

Pursuant to a Judgment of Foreclosure and Sale dated September 25, 2017 and entered on October 4, 2017, I, the undersigned Referee will sell at public auction at (CCP) Calendar Control Part Court Room of the Nassau Supreme Court, 100 Supreme Court Dr., Mineola, NY on September 27, 2022 at 2:00 p.m. premises situate, lying and being at Elmont, Town of Hempstead, County of Nassau and State of New York, bounded and described as follows:

Jeffrey Fox, Esq., Referee

■ 15-year-old Veronica Jones was report ed missing. She was last seen at her Clem ent Avenue residence. She is described as a black female, 5’1 tall, 118 pounds, brown eyes and black hair.

COUNTY OF NASSAU GMAT LEGAL TITLE TRUST 2013-1, U.S. BANK NATIONAL ASSOCIATION, AS LEGAL TITLE TRUSTEE, Plaintiff -againstNORMAN RUSSELL; KIMBERLY SUTHERLAND a/k/a KIMARLEY SUTHERLAND; LOUIS RUSSO MARVIN RUSSELL, et al Defendant(s).

LEGAL NOTICENOTICEOF SALE

Pursuant11590. to a Judgment of Foreclosure and Sale entered August 16, 2019, I will sell at public auction to the highest bidder at North Side Steps of the Nassau County Supreme Court at 100 Supreme Court Drive, Mineola, NY 11501 on September 28, 2022 at 2:00 PM. Premises known as 1518 Johnson Avenue, Elmont, NY 11003. Sec 32. Block 491 Lot 122. All that certain plot, piece or parcel of land, situate, lying and being at Elmont, Town of Hempstead, Nassau County, New York. Approximate Amount of Judgment is $220,661.56 plus interest and costs. Premises will be sold subject to provisions of filed Judgment Index No The000394/2017.foreclosure sale will be conducted in accordance with 10th Judicial District’s Covid-19 Policies and foreclosure auction rules. The Referee shall enforce any rules in place regarding facial coverings and social distancing. If proper social distancing cannot be maintained or there are other health or safety concerns, then the Court RefereeAppointedshallcancel the foreclosure auction. Foreclosure Auctions will be held “Rain or Shine.”

133880

■ 15-year-old Nia Jackson-McGowan was reported missing. She was last seen at her West Hempstead residence. She is described as a black female, 5’5 tall, 100 pounds, brown hair, and brown eyes.

BEGINNING at a point on the southeasterly side of

Nassau County Legislator Carrié Solages, in conjunction with the Nassau County Department of Assessment, announces the 2022 series of Property Tax Exemption Workshops for Third Leg islative District residents.

to theThursday,workshop.Sept. 29 will be at the Elmont Memorial Public Library at 700 Hemp stead Turnpike.

COURT.

Missing Persons

■ 38-year-old Gypsy Shaw was reported missing. She was last seen on Murdock Avenue. She is described as a white female, 5’4 tall, 200 pounds, blue eyes and

blonde and pink hair. She may be driving a 1993 Red Corvette with NY registration KATHARV.

thereon erected, situate, lying and being in the Town of Hempstead, County of Nassau and State of New York, Section 32, Block 470 and Lot 31. Approximate amount of judgment is $531,815.96 plus interest and costs. Premises will be sold subject to provisions of filed Judgment Index #006112/2014. Cash will not be accepted. 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.

During the workshops, Department of Assessment staff will assist residents with filing for veteran, senior citizen, Cold War veteran, volunteer firefighter and ambulance worker, limited-income disability or home improvement exemp tions. Enhanced STAR applications will also be processed for homeowners already enrolled in the STAR program prior to Jan. 2, The2015.workshop is from 1 to 2:30 PM. Par ticipants should bring copies of their 2021 federal and state income tax returns and other required documentation with them

■ Detectives request anyone with infor mation to contact the Nassau County Missing Persons Squad at 516-573-7347 or call 911.

Bruce R. Bekritsky, Esq., FriedmanReferee Vartolo LLP, 85 Broad Street, Suite 501, New York, New York 10004, Attorneys for Plaintiff, Firm File No. SUPREMENOTICELEGAL133758190996-1NOTICEOFSALE

SUPREMENOTICELEGAL133781#99713NOTICEOFSALE

All bidders must wear a face mask/shield at all times and social distancing must be observed by all bidders at all times. Bidders who do not comply with the face mask and/or the social distancing mandate will be removed from the

CRIME WATCH

■ 14-year-old Kimberlyn Cornejo-Reyes was reported missing. She was last seen leaving her Virginia Avenue residence. She is described as a Hispanic female, 5’3 tall, 110 pounds, hazel eyes and medium length red hair. She was last seen wearing a green/blue shirt and grey sweatpants. It is believe that she may be in the Hemp stead area.

■ 15-year-old Brianna Williamson was reported missing. She was last seen in the vicinity of Elk Street. She is described as a black female, 5’9, 130 pounds, black hair and black eyes. Her possible destination is local in Hempstead.

Larceny-from Auto

NASSAU COUNTY U.S. BANK TRUST, N.A., AS TRUSTEE FOR LSF9 MASTER PARTICIPATION PlaintiffTRUST, against LISA LATIMER, et al AttorneyDefendant(s)for Plaintiff(s) Fein Such & Crane, LLP, 1400 Old Country Road, Suite 103N, Westbury, NY

■ Victim reports unknown subject(s) removed $30 from his unlocked vehicle while parked on Madison Avenue.

Saidauction.premises known as 125 DIAMOND STREET, ELMONT, ApproximateNY amount of lien $452,889.04 plus interest & costs. Premises will be sold subject to provisions of filed Judgment and Terms of IndexSale. Number JANE16272/2010.P.SHRENKEL, ESQ., KosterichReferee & Skeete, LLC Attorney(s) for Plaintiff 707 Westchester Ave, Suite 302, White Plains, NY 10604 {* Elmont Herald*}

COURT COUNTY OF NASSAU, BANK OF AMERICA, N.A., Plaintiff, vs. WALLACE MORRIS, ET AL., PursuantDefendant(s).to a Consent Judgment of Foreclosure and Sale duly entered on July 13, 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 on October 11, 2022 at 2:00 p.m., premises known as 1601-01 Johnson Avenue, Elmont, NY 11003 a/k/a 1601 Johnson Avenue, Apt. 1, Elmont, NY 11003. All that certain plot, piece or parcel of land, with the buildings and improvements

■ 14-year-old Chaessy Rodriguez-Sosa was reported missing. She was last seen at her Burr Avenue residence in Hemp stead. She is described as a Hispanic female, 5’2, 105 pounds with brown eyes and straight black hair. She was last seen wearing a white tee shirt, blue and white pants, and carrying a dark blue gym bag.

Said property beginning at a point on the Easterly side of Oakley Ave., distant 480 ft. southerly from the corner formed by the intersection of the easterly side of Oakley Ave. with the southerly side of “E” Street, being a plot 40 ft. x 80 ft. Approx. amt. of judgment is $434,581.65 plus costs and interest. Sold subject to terms and conditions of filed judgment and terms of sale. Foreclosure auction will be held “rain or shine.” If proper social distancing cannot be maintained or there are other health or safety concerns, then the court appointed referee will cancel the sale. MARK RICCIARDI, Referee. THE MARGOLIN & WEINREB LAW GROUP, LLP, Attys. for Pltf., 165 Eileen Way, Ste. 101, Syosset, NY.

—Brian Pfail

Diamond Street, distant 44.98 feet northeasterly as measured along the southeasterly side of Diamond Street from the extreme easterly end of the arc connecting the northeasterly side of Emily Avenue with the southeasterly side of Diamond Street; being a plot 53.28 feet by 99.19 feet by 72 feet by 99.89 feet. S/B/L 32-684-20

SUPREMENOTICELEGAL133593NOTICEOFSALE

SUPREME COURT

For a complete list, www.nassaucountyny.govvisitor call the Nassau County Department of Assessment at (516) 571-1500

LFRA1 0915 To Place A Notice Call 516-569-4000 x232 Search for notices online www.newyorkpublicnotices.comat: Place a notice by phone at 516-569-4000 x232 or legalnotices@liherald.comemail: 19 202215,Septemebr—HERALDSQUARE/ELMONTFRANKLIN

SUPREMELEGAL133613AYSJN033NOTICECOURT

Solages invites residents to tax exemption workshop

■ Victim reports unknown subject(s) removed a PA license plate from his vehi cle while parked at Waldorf Avenue.

Petit Larceny

SALE SUPREME COURT COUNTY OF NASSAU HSBC BANK USA, NATIONAL ASSOCIATION, AS TRUSTEE FOR THE HOLDERS OF NOMURA HOME EQUITY LOAN, INC., HOME EQUITY LOAN TRUST, SERIES 2007-1, Plaintiff AGAINST ALBERTA WOODS F/K/A ALBERTA REEDER, et al., Defendant(s) Pursuant to a Judgment of Foreclosure and Sale duly entered September 24, 2018, I, the undersigned Referee will sell at public auction at the North Side steps of the Nassau County Supreme Court, 100 Supreme Court Drive, Mineola, NY 11501 on October 6, 2022 at 2:30PM, premises known as 149 CARNEGIE AVENUE, ELMONT, NY 11003. All that certain plot piece or parcel of land, with the buildings and improvements erected, situate, lying and being Village of Elmont, County of Nassau and State of New York, SECTION 32, BLOCK 356, LOT 102. Approximate amount of judgment $684,295.35 plus interest and costs. Premises will be sold subject to provisions of filed Judgment Index #011494/2009. The aforementioned auction will be conducted in accordance with the NASSAU County 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. Foreclosure Auctions will be held “Rain or Shine”. Janine T. Lynam, Esq., Referee Gross Polowy, LLC 1775 Wehrle Drive Williamsville, NY 14221 00-155711 72954

PursuantDefendant(s).toan Amended Order Confirming Referee Report and Judgment of Foreclosure and Sale duly entered on June 6, 2022, and a Substitute Referee Order duly entered on July 21, 2022, I, the undersigned Referee will sell at public auction at the front steps on the north side of the Nassau County Supreme Court, 100 Supreme Court Drive, Mineola, NY on October 6, 2022 at 2:00 p.m., premises known as 1053 Lorraine Drive, Franklin Square, NY 11010. 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, Section 35, Block 531 and Lot 25. Approximate amount of judgment is $400,995.67 plus interest and costs. Premises will be sold subject to provisions of filed Judgment Index #607866/2019. 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

Ellen Durst, Esq., Referee Knuckles, Komosinski & Manfro, LLP, 565 Taxter Road, Suite 590, Elmsford, NY 10523, Attorneys for Plaintiff

NOTICELEGAL133936NOTICEOF

COURT COUNTY OF NASSAU, U.S. BANK TRUST, N.A. AS TRUSTEE FOR INVESTMENTBLUEWATER TRUST 2017-1, Plaintiff, vs. JOHN GIANNONE, ET AL.,

Courtesy Danny Schrafel LEGISLATOR CARRIÉ SOLAGES is spear heading the tax exemption workshops.

■ 25-year-old Aciya Anjuman was arrest ed for shoplifting at the Macy’s on Old Country Road.

NASSAU COUNTY.

a cover letter describing your career goals and what strengths you can bring to our newsroom,

Wanted

Excellent oral and written communication and quantitative skills Proficiency with Mishould

H1 EMPLOYMENT

the form

Talent acquisition: Source, screen, and interview potential candidates and manage new employee onboarding Benefits administration: Liaise with brokers, providers and facilitate enrollment and updating of coverage. Manage annual open enrollment and employee benefits review. Administration of 401(k) plan. Employee relations: Provide day- today support and problem resolution in regards to employee concerns, questions and policy issues. Performance management: Coach, counsel and recommend disciplinary actions Compliance: Maintain indepth knowledge of legal requirements related to day-to-day management of employees, reducing legal risk and ensuring regulatory compliance Payroll: Process biweekly payroll through payroll vendor for population of 150 employees Requirements: Bachelor's degree, preferably in business or HR, or equivalent experience

HUMAN RESOURCES DIRECTOR Richner Communications is looking for a hands-on Human Resources professional to oversee all HR functions on a strategic and tactical level. Exciting opportunity to join a dynamic and expanding Garden City, Long Island media company. This position has a flexible schedule, part-time job share would be

submit a resume and cover letter to: careers@liherald.com. CLASSIFIED Fax your ad to: 516-622-7460 E-mail you ad to: ereynolds@liherald.com E-mail Finds Under $100 to: sales@liherald.com DEADLINE: Monday, 11:00 am for all classified ads. Every effort is made to insure the accuracy of your ad. Please check your ad at the first insertion. Credit will be made only for the first insertion. Credit given for errors in ads is limited to the printed space involved. Publisher reserves right to reject, cancel or correctly classify and ad. To pLACE your AD CALL 516-569-4000 - press 5 EmploymentHERALD 1128595 RECRUITINGA TEAMGREAT ISSIMPLE.REALLY A Growing Multi Media Company Based in Garden City Is Hiring: • Receptionist • Human Resource Director • Reporter/Editor • Sales • Multi Media Coordinator • Drivers • Pressman/Press Helper To join our team, please email your resume to careers@liherald.com or Call 516-569-4000 Ext #235 WE HIRE THE BEST Join AHRC Nassau in assisting an amazing group of people with intellectual and developmental disabilities who we enjoy working with every day. Our programs help men & women learn new skills, build relationships, help develop self-esteem as well as discover interests and improve their social skills. We offer top benefits: • Flexible schedules • Tuition reimbursement • College loan forgiveness • Paid Training • Low-cost, healthcarehigh-qualityinsurance EOE m/f/d/v Call or Text “First and Last Name” to JOY at: 516-519-4790 or email: jramer@ahrc.org Client: AHRC NASSAU Publication: Long Island Herald Issue Date: 9/14, 9/21 and 9/28/22 Size: 3.125” x 6” This ad prepared by SMM631-265-5160Advertising Entry Level Support – Paid Training TUITION REIMBURSEMENT New Salary $15-$17/hour (OT available) We require: • A passion for helping others • NYS drivers’ license • Good verbal and written communication skills • Opportunities to advance • A diverse, inclusive team that will support you • A feeling of pride when you realize how many people you’ve helped • Wellness incentives LocationsCAREGIVERSthroughoutNassauCounty 1185512 BUSDRIVERSWANTED 1184374 DoN’T MISS The Bus! EDU c ATI o NA l BUS TRANS po RTATI o N 516.454.2300 NEW STARTING SAl ARIES Van $24.41/hr. Non-Benefit Rate Big Bus $27.18/hr. Non-Benefit Rate $2,500.00 for CDL driver bus and van $500.00 for non CDL drivers. Will train qualified applicants Sign On Bonus *Some restrictions may apply. JoB FAIR JoB FAIR September 15th 10am- 3pm VFW 320 South broadway Hicksville, NY 11801 September 19th 10am- 3pm 50 Court Street Copiague, NY 11726 118 4694 PART TIME Franklinjcentrella@franklinsquare.k12.ny.usIfCLEANERSSUBSTITUTENEEDEDVariousShiftsAsNeeded$18.75/HourExperienceAPlusGoodWorkEthicRequiredinterested,pleaseemailresumetoourPersonnelOfficeatSquareUFSD has the following position available: 118 4694 PART TIME Franklinjcentrella@franklinsquare.k12.ny.usIfCLEANERSSUBSTITUTENEEDEDVariousShiftsAsNeeded$18.75/HourExperienceAPlusGoodWorkEthicRequiredinterested,pleaseemailresumetoourPersonnelOfficeatSquareUFSD has the following position available: HERALDSQUARE/ELMONTFRANKLIN—202215,Septemebr 20

ADMINISTRATIVE

FULL TIME Needed For Garden City Law Firm. Responsibilities Include Filing, Ordering And Stocking Office Supplies, Mail Distribution, Photocopying, Scanning, And Errands To Banks, Post Office And Courts. Must Have A Vehicle And Valid N.Y. Driver License. Please Email Resume mjagnandan@albaneselegal.comToOrCall516-248-7000Ext.2212COMPANIONSP/TandF/TWithElderly-PCAExperienceRequiredAllHoursAvailableCALLAGENCY516-328-7126DELICLERK For Busy Oceanside Deli. Must Work Weekends. Call 718-838-4378 DELI COUNTER AND PREP PERSON Full Time And Part Time. Weekends A Must. Experienced. Long Beach. Call 516-431-5515 DELIVERY DRIVER: P/T Short Hours. Excellent Pay/Tips. Delivery Charge Goes To Driver. IMMEDIATE! 516-295-5421,Veronica/Mark/Glen DENTAL ASSISTANT FT/PT Rockville Centre. Great Work Environment. Benefts. Call Pati 516-764-4386. Email mgroffice@optonline.netResume: DRIVERS WANTED Excellent Opportunity High Volume DriversTransportationExecutiveCompanywithandwithoutCDL,ExperiencepreferredWilltrainalso,cleanlicenseShiftsavailable7daysaweekGreatworkingenvironmentCall516-889-4242DRIVERSWANTEDFullTimeandPartTimePositionsAvailable!BusyPrintShopinGardenCityisHiringImmediatelyforFullTimeandPartTimeDrivers.MustHaveaCleanLicenseandBoxTruckDrivingExperience.HoursVary,NightAvailabilityisaMust.PleaseEmailResumetoehecker@liherald.comorCall(516)569-4000x239 DRIVING WANTEDINSTRUCTORS Will Certify And Train HS Diploma NYS License Clean 3 Years Call EDITOR/REPORTER516-731-3000 The award-winning Herald Community Newspapers group, covering Nassau County's North and South Shores with hard-hitting news stories and gracefully written features, seeks a motivated, energetic and creative editor/reporter to join our dynamic (and awesome) team! This education and general assignment reporting position offers a unique experience to learn from some of the best in the business. Historically, reporters who have launched their careers with us have gone on to The New York Times, Newsweek, Newsday, the New York Daily News, New York Post, CNN, BBC, NBC News and The Daily Mail, among many others. We look for excellent writers who are eager to learn, enhance their skills, and become well-established and respected journalists in our industry. To apply: Send

Role

Qualified

requires working knowledge of Microsoft Office and ability to learn custom software programs. If you would like to join a communitydriven, fast-paced environment, please send your resume to: careers@liherald.com. Busy Rockville Centre Landlord/Tenant law firm seeking 1 full time Administrative SalaryAssistant/Secretary.–commensurate with experience. Health Benefit Plan; 401K, other benefits Hours:available.8:30 a.m. – 5:30 p.m. (Monday –Thursday) & 8:00 a.m. – 5:00 p.m. (FriPleaseday). email resumes Christine@rosenblumbianco.comto: CAR Email:ContactP/T,SENIORSPURCHASERSWELCOMEEarn$1,000PerCarCarDealersAndPlaceOrders.ValidDriversLicenseCleanRecordAndBasicCarKnowledgeNecessarysusan.omnimotors@gmail.comCASHIER/STOCKPERSONFT For Busy Grocery Store In West Hempstead. Call Carol 516-489-6926 CIRCULATION ASSOCIATE Full Time/Part Time Richner Communications, publisher of Herald community newspapers has an excellent opportunity for a FT/PT Customer Service Clerk in our busy Circulation Department. Basic customer service and administrative responsibilities include: heavy computer work, answering phones, making phone calls, entering orders, faxing, filing, etc. STRONG knowledge of EXCEL a must! Knowledge of DATABASE maintenance or postal regulations a big plus. Qualified Candidates must be computer literate, able to multitask, dependable, reliable, organized, energetic, detail orientated and able to work well under deadlines. For consideration, please send resume & salary requirements to: CLEANINGcareers@liherald.comPERSONFTNeeded For Local Cleaning Company. Will Train. If Interested Call Bill 516-678-5943

Responsibilities:considered.

Minimum 5 years HR generalist experience

candidates are fast learners with good organizational and people skills - entry level ok.

crosoft Office Qualified candidates

Richner Communications - a rapidly growing multimedia company and publishers of the Herald newspaper grouphas several administrative job openings: Receptionist (F/T), AccountsMulti-MediaCollectionsReceivable/BillingClerkCoordinator(HoursFlexible)

Help

CLERK a brief summary in of along with a resume and three writing samples to mhinman@riverdalepress.com

Knowledge of Federal, State & Local regulations governing employment Experience with payroll processing Self-motivated, ability to prioritize and work well under pressure Customer-focused attitude, with high level of professionalism and discretion

Available Hours: Sun. thru Wed., 3pm-8pm or Fri. & Sat., 3pm-8pm, Sun. 7am-3pm

TYPIST- P/T, IMMEDIATE. As Needed In Your Spare Time. From Your Home. Retiree Welcome. 516-485-6738. in This Bayswater 4 BR, 1.5 Bth Split Tucked Away in Cul de Sac. Fin Bsmt. Att Gar. O/S Resortlike Yard on the Bay. Opportunity to Make This Your Dream Home!..$719,000 Ronnie Gerber, Douglas Elliman 516-238-4299

HEWLETT HARBOR BA, 206 Albon Rd, FIRST TIME ON MARKET! Grand & Elegant 6200 Sq Ft Col Tucked Away on over an Acre of Parklike Prop w/ IG Pool. 7 BR, 7.5 Bth, All Spacious Rms. Elevator. 4 Car Att Gar. Opportunity to Make This Your Dream Home...$2,399,000 Ronnie Gerber, Douglas Elliman 516-238-4299

Employment

OFFICE ASSISTANT P/T We Are In Search Of A Dependable Assistant For Answering Phones, Scheduling Appointments, Copying, Data Entry, And Various Other Office Duties. Will Train The Right Candidate. E mail Resume ResumetoMedicalwilsoncollegeconsulting.comjwpersonal@To:OFFICEHELPReliable,P/T,Mon-FriVariousOfficeDutiesComputer,PhonesRetireesWelcomeOfficeInLawrenceCall516-371-2225EmailResumeramh2167@aol.comOUTSIDESALESRichnerCommunications,OneoftheFastestGrowingMedia,EventandCommunicationsCompaniesonLongIslandisSeekingaSales/MarketingCandidateSellourPrintMediaProductsandourDigital,Events,Sponsorships.Salary,Commission,EligibleforHealthBenefits,401kandPaidTimeOff.WillConsiderPartTime.PleaseSendCoverLetterandwithSalaryRequirementstoereynolds@liherald.comorCall516-569-4000X286PRESS-ROOM/WAREHOUSEHELP

lifting is required. Hours vary, so flexibility is key. Email resumes or contact info to PRIVATEcareers@liherald.comDRIVERNEEDED Weekly Hours Vary. Occasional Overnight Stay. Use Of Company Car. Background Check And DMV Check. Call For Details. Barbara 516-705-4804

RECEPTIONIST - FULL TIME Receptionist (full-time) needed for Publisher and Self-Storage Facility located in Garden City. The ideal candidate should have excellent communications and customer service skills, be professional, dependable and have reliable transportation. Candidate should have computer knowledge and working knowledge of MS Office. Candidate MUST be reliable, punctual and be able to work a CONSISTENTMondayschedule:andWednesday 8am to 4pm Tuesday and Thursday 8am to 6pm Friday 8am to 5pm

Open

1534 Broadway #103, BA, Magnificent New Renovation! One of a Kind Ranch Style Living in Luxurious Jonathan Hall Condominium with Doorman & Elevator. Just Move into This Gut Renovated, Spacious 2 BR, 2 Bath Apt with Open Layout. Large Designer Eat in Kitchen with Sep Pantry & Laundry Rm. Master BR Boasts Gorgeous Bth & Walk in Closet. Terrace Faces into Courtyard. Garage Parking Incl REDUCED $769,000 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 REDUCED!! $799,000 ROCKVILLE CENTRE 133 S. Centre Ave, BA, Move Right Into This Renovated 4/5 BR, 3 Bth Colonial w/ LR, DR & Gran/ Wood EIK with Stainless Steel Appl. Full Bsmt, 2 Car Gar. RVC Schools REDUCED!! $949,000 299 Princeton Rd, BA, Move Right Into This 3 BR, 2.5 Bth Colonial on Lovely Street. LR w/ Fpl, FDR, Sun Room & Updated Gran/Wood EIK. Master Ste Has Updtd Bth. Walk Up Attic with Cedar Closet. Fin Bsmt. 2 Car Det Gar. Rockville Centre SD REDUCED! $799,000 CE da RHURST 332B Peninsula Blvd, BA, FIRST TIME ON MARKET! Move Right Into This Updated Townhouse Featuring 3 Spacious Bedroom, 2.5 Bths, Living Room, Dining Room & Gran/Wood Kit w/ Stainless Steel Appl. Attached Garage Plus 1 additional Pkg Space. Washer/Dryer. Pull Down Attic Has Lots of storage. Trex Deck off LR. CAC 2 Zones, Gas Ht. Convenient to Shops, Trans & Houses of Worship, SD#15 $449,000 Fa R ROCK aWay 33-47 Bay Ct, 12-1:30, FIRST TIME ON MARKET! Enjoy The Waterviews in This Bayswater 4 BR, 1.5 Bth Split Tucked Away in Cul de Sac. Fin Bsmt. Att Gar. O/S Resortlike Yard on the Bay. Opportunity to Make This Your Dream Home! $719,000 One phone call, one order, one heck of a good price to run your ad in any state, or across the country. Call the USA Classified Network today! 1-800-231-6152 Rhonda Healy M: (516) 236-7269 Real Estate Salesperson, abR, SRS E: Rhonda@RhondaHealy.com 1181778Verdeschi & Walsh Realty 1025 W. Beech St. | Long Beach, NY OneKeyService “Going Above & Beyond to find your Dream Home” Rent Your Apartment through the Herald and PrimeTime Classified section. Call us for our great *specials. 516-5694000, press 5 for Classified Dept. *(private party only) 21 202215,Septemebr—HERALD

N

MEDICAL ASSISTANT FT Pulmonary Office. Lawrence And Rockville Centre. Experienced Preferred. Vital Signs, Patient Care, Phone Work, File And Prepare Charts. Pulmonary Function Studies A Plus. Email Resume To: southshore360@gmail.comOrCall516-569-6966

Busy

Contact - Diane Ziems Phone: 516.671.7008 Diane.Ziems@atriaseniorliving.com

Line Cook Must Complete Prep Work, Cook Following Recipes, Set Up Steam Table. Clean Work Station. Available Hours: Sun. thru Thurs., 11am-7pm. or Fri. & Sat. 11am-7pm, Sun. & Mon. 6:30am to 2:30pm.

ROCKVILLE CENTRE BA 133 S. Centre Ave, REDUCED! Move Right Into This Renovated 4/5 BR, 3 Bth Colonial w/ LR, DR & Gran/Wood EIK with Stainless Steel Appl. Full Bsmt, 2 Car Gar. RVC Schools..$949,000 Ronnie Gerber, Douglas Elliman 516-238-4299

Job Responsibilities include, but are not limited to: Answering phones and greeting customers, assisting new customers by showing storage facility options and pricing, collecting payments from customers, contacting customers for late payments, applying payments and updating the customer files /data base and other general administrative responsibilities on an as needed basis. Hourly pay, plus eligible for Holiday Pay, PTO, Medical, Dental, 401k with company matching, plus other benefits. Qualified candidates should email their resume, cover letter and salary requirements. No phone calls please. Job Type: Full-time. Salary: $15.00 /hour Email your resume

HERALD To place an ad call 516-569-4000 press 5 • To place an ad call 516-569-4000 press 5

to assist in various

HERALD To place an ad call 516-569-4000 press 5

Dr

Health Care/Opportunities WE HAVE THE HELP YOU NEED!!! HHA's, LPN's, Nurse's Aides Childcare. Housekeeping Day Workers No Fee To Employers Evon's Svces: 516-505-5510 Situations Wanted ADMINISTRATIVE ASSISTANT Needs A Job For FT/PT Position. RVC Vicinity. Available Immediately. Experienced. Call 516-536-6994 REAL ESTATE Open Houses EAST ROCKAWAY BA, 25 Thompson Dr, NEW! 6 BR, 4.5 Bth Renovated & Expanded 4500 Sq Ft Home with Open Layout. 2 Story EF, Huge Gran/Wood Chefs Kitchen w/2 Islands, LR/Fpl & Fam Rm. Primary Ste Boasts Rad Htd Bath, 2 WICs. SD#20 in Waverly Park Area. MUST SEE!...$1,139,000 Ronnie Gerber, Douglas Elliman 516-238-4299 FAR ROCKAWAY 33-47 Bay Ct, OPEN HOUSE SUNDAY, 9/18,12-1:30, FIRST TIME ON MARKET! Enjoy The Waterviews

Open

Houses

for a

09/15H2

ewly renovated Classic Colonial in the heart of Hewlett! The living room with fireplace and formal dining room make entertaining a pleasure! There are refinished hardwood floors throughout. A gorgeous white kitchen boasts stainless steel appliances. The family room / 4th bedroom on first floor with private full bath is great for weekend guests! Three large bedrooms and additional full bath upstairs provide space for all. There is also a full basement and fenced yard. This beautiful home is close to shopping, restaurants, and houses of worship. Do not miss this gem! $855,000

Homes

Help Wanted

Must Take Orders From Residents, Serve Drinks, Meals, and Desserts. Clear Tables, Reset Tables, Clean Station and Side Work.

4

Help Wanted

Classic Colonial Gem Ste Boasts Rad Htd Bath, 2 WICs. SD#20 in Waverly Park Area. MUST SEE! $1,139,000 HEWLETT 220 Jackson Pl, BA, NEW FULL HOUSE RENTAL in SD#20. Immaculate/Furnished Colonial at the End of Private Dead End St. Mstr BR/Bth Plus 3 Addl BRs & Bath on Second Level. LR, FDR, Sunken Den w/ Fpl & Spacious EIK. 2 Car Att Gar. Fin Bsmt. O/s Prop $4,950/ Month

3

HOMEOftHEWEEK Hewlett Nanci-sue Rosenthal CBR Licensed R.E. Salesperson C: Ssimens@bhhslaffey.comC:LicensedStaceyNrosenthal@bhhslaffey.com516.316.1030SimensCBRR.E.Salesperson516.455.8152 1185387Ronnie 516-238-4299Gerber OPEN HOUSES S UN day, 9/18/22 HEWLETT H a RBOR 206 Albon Rd, BA, FIRST TIME ON MARKET! Grand & Elegant 6200 Sq Ft Col Tucked Away on over an Acre of Parklike Prop w/ IG Pool. 7 BR, 7.5 Bth, All Spacious Rms. Elevator. 4 Car Att Gar. Opportunity to Make This Your Dream Home $2,399,000 1299 Seawane Dr, BA, Beautiful 4 BR, 3 Bath Exp Ranch with Open Layout in Prime Location. Updtd Wood/Marble Kitchen & Great Room Overlooking Magnificently Landscaped 3/4 Acre Parklike Prop. Main Floor Primary Ste. SD#14 $1,799,000 E a ST ROCK aWay 8 Acorn Rd, BA, 5 BR, 3 Bth Front to Back Split on Beautiful Quiet St in Lynbrook SD#20. Fin Bsmt, Att Gar. CAC, Gas Ht, HW Flr. REDUCED! $749,000 25 Thompson Dr, BA, NEW! 6 BR, 4.5 Bth Renovated & Expanded 4500 Sq Ft Home with Open Layout. 2 Story EF, Huge Gran/Wood Chefs Kitchen w/2 Islands, LR/Fpl & Fam Rm. Primary

in the

COVE HAS AVAILABLEWaitstaffPOSITIONS:

HEWLETT HARBOR BA 1299 Seawane Beautiful BR, Bath Exp Ranch with Layout in Prime Location.Updtd Wood/Marble Kitchen & Great Room Overlooking Magnificently Landscaped 3/4 Acre Parklike Prop. Main Floor Primary Ste. SD#14...$1,799,000 Ronnie Gerber, Douglas Elliman 516-238-4

City. We

print

OBGYN Office Rockville Centre. Call MaureenTHE516-764-1095ATRIA-GLEN

RECEPTIONISTcareers@liherald.comto:FULLTIME:

Long Island Herald has IMMEDIATE openings for a FULL-TIME Pressroom/warehouse helper in Garden are a busy shop looking motivated and reliable individuals duties shop. Forklift experience is a plus and heavy

MoneyTo Lend

Taxes: $12,692.86

House For Sale

Main Floor, In Large Medical Building. About 120 sq. ft. Furnished With Waiting Room Cleaning Service, Parking, Near Public WheelchairTransportationAccessible Call David Ilson 516-317-4590

ARE YOU BEHIND $10k OR MORE ON YOUR TAXES? Stop wage & bank levies, liens & audits, unfiled tax returns, payroll issues, & resolve tax debt FAST. Call 888-869-5361 (Hours: Mon-Fri 7am-5pm PST) 1185764 … a place to call your own. To Place an Ad Call: 516-569-4000 • Press 5 Suburb or country, house, condo, townhouse or apartment, our Classifieds can help you find a HOME that fits your style, your budget and Real Estate needs... it’s a MUST SEE! Call us today! Your Hometown Newspaper Helping you find a HOME or sell a HOME Rent Your Apartment through the Herald and PrimeTime Classified section. Call us for our great *specials. 516-5694000, press 5 for Classified Dept. *(private party only) Wenk PIPING & HEATING CORP. If Your Plumbing STInkS Call The 516-889-3200WenkS! Oil to Gas Conversions • Hot Water Heaters Boilers • Radiant Heat • Whole House Water Filters All Plumbing & Heating Work • Lic./Ins. FREE ESTIMATES • 24/7 Emergency Service Available wenkpipingandheating.com $ 2 5 OFF Any Service Call For New Customers Exp. 10/15/22 1182121 WANTED DEAD OR ALIVE TREE REMOVAL • LAND CLEARING • PRUNING SUMMER IS HERE AND IT'S SURELY HEATING UP ... CALL US WHEN YOUR TREES NEED TO BE CUT TUMP GRINDING • ELEVATING • STORM PREVENTION OWNER OPERATED • RESIDENTIAL/COMMERCIAL 516-216-2617 SERTREEVICE ESTIMAFREETES Lic. # 185081 Suff Lic# HI-65621 WWW.WECARETREESERVICE.COM #1181259CERTIFIED ARBORIST ON STAFF 1181931 631-532-5617 • Cell: 516-996-3036 Home Improvement Corp. www.tikalhomeimprovement.com LIC: #H3711000000LIC: #42194-H Free estImates • Licensed & Insured Masonry • Steps • Driveways Water Proofing • Pointing • Siding Kitchen Remodeling • Roofing Basements • Windows • Sheetrock & More todCALLAy A nd s Ave 1185419 *Power washing sPecialist* Also specializes in ★ Deck Renovation ★ Driveways Siding ★ Masonry ★ Fences ★ Roofing ★ Interior/Exterior Painting. (516) 678-6641 - Licensed & Insured Free estimates...Best Price For High Quality service Residential and Commercial - All Surfaces Call Anthony Romeo “The Local Guy” “Anthony & J Home Improvement, Inc.” ALL CLEAR DRAIN & SEWER SERVICE (516)409-9696 • (631)422-9696 Sinks • Tubs • Toilets • Sewer Lines 1184389 DEEP FREEZE HVAC/R CENTRAL A/C. DUCTLESS, SERVICE & INSTALLATION CARRIER & BRYANT AUTHORIZED DEALER 516-792-0454 SAME DAY WWW.DEEPFREEZEHVAC.COMSERVICE 1183728 Licensed & insured Free estimatesseniorCitizenDiscountsSpecializing in BLACKTOP at the BeSt priceS in town • ConCrete • BriCk Patios • stooPs • stuCCo • Belgium BloCks • sidewalks • drainage ProBlems • Cellar entranCe • waterProofing • driveway sealing demolition • dumPster serviCe • Powerwashing • handyman rePairs 516-807-3852516-424-3598 Call For Summer SpecialS ALFREDO’S CONSTRUCTION Se Habla Español 1180994 MarketPlace HERALD To place an ad call 516-569-4000 press 5 Homes HERALD To place an ad call 516-569-4000 press 5HERALD—202215,Septemebr 22

Part-time Office Available

Taxes: $12,193.45

ST. MAARTEN TIMESHARE: One BR, Sleeps 6, On The Beach. July Week. $7000. Call 516-680-4246

2 Car Garage, 3800 sq.ft.

PATH TO

ROCKVILLE CENTRE

Circular Driveway

Taxes: $23,396.47

Full Basement

CommunityHOMEOWNERSHIPHousingInnovations

A sampling of recent sales in the area

Elmont $580,000

Wheelchair Accessible. Walk Worship.... 516-641-0682$2Mil.

Merrick $975,000

CEDARHURST NO FEE Private Entrance, Modern 1BR, 2BR, 3BR, CAC, W/D, Storage, Wall To Wall Carpeting, Indoor Parking Space. Starting At $1450 For One Bedroom When Available. (516)860-6889/ (516)852-5135/ (516)582-9978

09/15H3

September 28, 2022 -Network 6:15-7:30pm-

Large Gracious Ranch

Taxes: $15,828

Pennsylvania Avenue. Contemporary. 3 bedrooms, 2 bath rooms. Eat-in kitchen with granite countertops and stain less steel appliances. Open layout with cathedral ceiling.

Apartments For Rent

Wellington Road. Cape. 3 bedroom, 1 bathrooms. Kitchen with granite countertops. Formal dining room. First floor master bedroom. Security system.

Vacation Sales

Seawane Drive. Split Level. 4 bedrooms, 3 bathrooms. Finished basement. Gourmet eat-in kitchen. Formal dining room. All large sunny rooms. New roof and stucco siding, contemporary front door, new back porch and deck. Many updates. Convenient location near shopping, dining, trans portation, and more.

Sheldon Place. Colonial. 4 bedrooms, 2.5 bathrooms.

Partial finished basement with rec room. Gourmet eat-in kitchen and pantry. Grand formal living room with fireplace. Formal dining room. Den/family room and home office.

Overlook Place. Expanded Ranch. 3 bedrooms, 2 bath rooms. Finished basement with outside entrance. Updated eat-in kitchen with granite countertops and stainless steel appliances. Formal dining room. Den/family room and home office. Central air conditioning. Close to LIRR and Silver Lake Park.

Fenimore Street. Expanded Cape. 3 bedrooms, 2 bath rooms Kitchen with granite countertops. First floor bedroom. Security system.

Mortgages & Loans

Harvard Avenue. Colonial. 4 bedrooms, 2 bathrooms..

Long Beach $779,000

Baldwin $625,000

Oversized master bedroom with extensive closet space. All large bedrooms with closet systems. Many designer finish

Finished basement. Eat-in kitchen. Formal dining room. Den/family room.

Oceanside $750,000

6 Bedroom, 5 Bath

Offices For Rent

Lynbrook $620,000

Front porch and deck with amazing bay views. First floor bedroom. Closed to beach, shopping, dining.

Lake End Road. Colonial. 4 bedrooms 2.5 bathrooms. New eat-in kitchen with shaker cabinets, granite countertops high-end appliances. Open concept layout. Formal dining room. Den/family room with fireplace. Ensuite master bed room with spa bathroom and 2 oversized walk-in closets. Patio doors open to serene backyard. Many updates, including oversized windows, wainscoting and crown mold ings. Convenient location near LIRR, library, shopping, din ing, park, marina and beach.

Presention Four Points By Sheraton 333 South Service Road, Plainview, NY FREE TO EVERYONE! PRE REGISTRATION REQUIRED Visit Our Website: www.communityhousing.org/events/ORCALL914-595-0992,EXT.1287 Sponsored By: Home Team Mortgage

Taxes: $12,277.27

Source: The Multiple Listing Service of Long Island Inc,, a computerized network of real estate offices serving Nassau, Suffolk, Queens, and Brooklyn.

LR, DR, Den, Fireplace

Rockville Centre $985,000

Herald

Well Water Sprinklers

Taxes: $26,613.42

Hewlett Harbor $1,100,000

Reception

LAWRENCE SOUTH Sale By Owner

Home Sales

Taxes: $11,441.90

5:30pm-6:15pm

Taxes:es. $21,430

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.

Q. Our new home is pretty old, from 1920. We want to update it and have a lot of concerns, with taxes if we enlarge it, cost if we get rid of walls, widen ing our driveway to park more cars and what you think about getting rid of our garage for more room instead of building up. It’s a one-story with low ceil ings on the second floor that are really too small for bedrooms. My parents have been reading your column for many years and suggested you could help. What can you tell us?

Most of the time, people complain about taxa tion but rarely, if ever, do they collectively attempt to do anything about it. The methods for deciding value, or even using value as a gauge for tax increases, are questionable, especially because we used to be taxed based on square feet. As we transi tion into not leaving our homes, communicating digitally, the tax system perpetuates without chal lenge.Inmany villages and towns, garages are required, and hard surfaces for any kind of paving are considered “impervious,” not replenishing groundwater. There are limits on how much of your total property you can cover. You will need to investigate your specific jurisdiction’s require ments. Sidewalks, patios and driveways are all impervious, but pools and decks generally are not.

The only way to answer questions about remov ing walls is to assess the whole house: where to dis perse loads, how to brace exterior walls against wind shear, how to handle snow loads and wind uplift, where pipes and wires would be relocated, how the spaces function and will be finished.

Package all this to be reviewed by building officials and receive permission to build — sounds simpler than it is, especially when workers leave details out or change something and we start adjusting all over again, only after much discussion, time and money. That’s also part of the age-old process. Avoid chang es once you decide, save money doing so and your old house will be like new again.

Ask ArchitectThe

Monte Leeper

Making an old home newer

A. It’s hard for me not to feel as old as your house when you put it that way, but after writing this column for 33 years, I’m often doing work for children of former cli ents, and have gotten your question thousands of times. First, almost any thing you do that adds space to your home also adds value, and value increases taxes. Cosmetic changes like siding, win dows or an asphalt or con crete driveway generally don’t affect the value, but luxury materials, such as stone facing or interlocking pavers, will.

MarketPlaceHERALD To place an ad call 516-569-4000 press 5 • To place an ad call 516-569-4000 press 5 1109488 1182695 QUALITY FENCE INSTALLATION AT A GREAT PRICE VINYL FENCE CHAIN LINK FENCE ALUMINUM FENCE WOOD FENCE PVC RAILINGS FREE LICENSEDESTIMATESINSURED DG FENCE 516-860-9555 1180199 24/7 EMERGENCY WWW.1800WATERDAMAGE.COM1-800-928-3732SERVICE REMOVAL • EXTRACTION & RESTORATION SERVICES Commercial & Residential FLOODS, WATER, SEWAGE, BIO-HAZARD, FIRE, SMOKE Restoring What Matters Most™ 24/7 EMERGENCY WWW.1800WATERDAMAGE.COM1-800-928-3732SERVICE REMOVAL • EXTRACTION & RESTORATION SERVICES Commercial & Residential FLOODS, WATER, SEWAGE, BIO-HAZARD, FIRE, SMOKE Restoring What Matters Most™ 24/7 EMERGENCY WWW.1800WATERDAMAGE.COM1-800-928-3732SERVICE REMOVAL • EXTRACTION & RESTORATION SERVICES Commercial & Residential FLOODS, WATER, SEWAGE, BIO-HAZARD, FIRE, SMOKE Restoring What Matters Most™ 1181596 Sunday,OWA_Purge_BW_BoldAugust02,2020 11:06:29 AM 1182680 1184522 SERVICES: INSTALLATIONS • REPAIRS/ SERVICES PROFESSIONAL DESIGN • SPRING START-UP & WINTER CLOSING SERVICE CONTRACTS • ATHLETIC FIELDS When You Buy From Us, You Get FREE 5 Year Guarantee! Rain Sensor, Spring Start up, Fall Winterize, Valve Containment System, Dura Manifold System For Easy On/Off Service, Backflow Test, Extra Wiring For Future Use, Hose Bib. ORDER NOW & WE WILL UPGRADE YOUR HEAD CONNECTION WITH BLAZING SADDLES & SWING JOINTS! LICENSED & INSURED LIC. # H351118000 516-255-9595 FAST • RELIABLE • REASONABLE RATES www.CountyIrrigation.Com County Irrigation Services Lawn Sprinkler Specialist JOBS, MERCHANDISE, REAL ESTATE & MORE... JOBS, MERCHANDISE, REAL ESTATE & MORE... JOBS, MERCHANDISE, REAL ESTATE & MORE... JOBS, MERCHANDISE, REAL ESTATE & MORE... It’s in the Herald Classifieds... To Advertise Call 516-569-4000 press 5 23 202215,Septemebr—HERALDSQUARE/ELMONTFRANKLIN

You’ll need your property survey, which is a map of your lot, house size and location, but you’ll also discover that surveyors generally don’t provide the dimensions of porches, sidewalks, driveways or steps. Get out a tape measure and accurately docu ment the property’s hard surfaces if you’re in a community that requires impervious-area informa tion. When you hire an architect or engineer, that’s what we have to do.

© 2022 Monte Leeper

H4 09/15

VINTAGE

13 PC Canister Spice jars: Mepocoware Ceramic Lidded, Floral design, Opal luster $85 516-350-3539 VINTAGE 13 PC Canister Spice Jars Mepoco Ware German Ceramic Lidded Handpainted, Floral $85 516-350-3539 WINTER COVER FOR 15 ft. above ground round pool, $45 516-887-2656 Y BIKE EXPLORER 2.0 red/black $30.00 (516) 462-2656 Finds Under $100 ZOBO HIGH CHAIR with tray, Gently used. $20.00. 516-835-3092 SERVICES Brick/Block/Concrete/Masonry *MICHAEL LO Lic./CementCONSTRUCTION*BAIDOSpecialist,Brickwork,InterlockBricks,BelgiumBlocks,Stoops,Patios,BasementEntrances,Pavers,Waterproofing.QualityWork,Ins.OwnerAlwaysOnsiteFreeEstimates516-354-5578

Junk Cars Wanted

GREAT

BABY BOY'S SNOWSUIT: Size 12M, and overalls. Brand new w/tags, $20; 917 420 5814

Dan 516-342-0761

Service

Pet Services GRACIE'S DOG WALKING & SITTING: Looking To Have Your Dog Walked Or Watched While At Work Or Away? You Found Me. Please Call Kim 516-554-1847 Plumbing PLUMBER! PLUMBER! PLUMBER! FREE ESTIMATES! Heating, Repairs, Installations. $25 OFF New Customers. 24 Hour Emergency 516-599-1011Response. PLUMBING & HEATING ALL TYPES Boilers, Bathrooms. Small/Large Jobs. Free Estimates. Call Tony 516-281-6061

ATTENTION VIAGRA USERS: Generic 100mg blue pills or generic 20mg yellow pills. Get 45 plus 5 free $99 + S/H. Call Today. 877-707-5523

HErald Crossword Puzzle StuffHERALD To place an ad call 516-569-4000 press 5 • To place an ad call 516-569-4000 press 5 • To place an ad call 516-569-4000 press 5 Answers to todAy’s puzzle CRAZY? HERALDSQUARE/ELMONTFRANKLIN—202215,Septemebr 24

POWERWASHING ALL SURFACES: Houses, Fences, Concrete/ Brick, Decks/Sealing. . ANTHONY & J HOME IMPROVEMENT, INC. 516-678-6641

ANTIQUE CAST IRON & lamp, 5' tall. $99. call 516-798-2098.

Finds Under $100

Rates.

Repairs and Installations for the Household. Careful and Reliable and Vaccinated. Licensed and Insured. 30-Year Nassau County Resident. Friendly Frank Phone/Text E-mail-Frankcav@optonline.net516-238-2112

NEVER PAY FOR Covered Home Repairs Again! Complete Care Home Warranty COVERS ALL MAJOR SYSTEMS AND APPLIANCES. 30 DAY RISK FREE. $200.00 OFF + 2 FREE Months! 866-440-6501

COMPUTER & IT TRAINING PROGRAM! Train ONLINE to get the skills to become a Computer & Help Desk Professional now! Grants and Scholarships available for certain programs for qualified applicants. Call CTI for details! (844) 947-0192 (M-F 8am-6pm ET)

FINDS UNDER $100

Sun.

ROOFING GREAT PRICES ! NEW ROOF SPECIALS SIDING- Best Prices RENOVATIONS & ALL REPAIRS SUPER COMPETITIVE PRICES! Lic/ Ins. Free Estimates Nassau Lic. # H-0102710000 Call John - 516-852-9830

Handyman

T&M GREENCARE TREE SERVICE *Tree Removal *Stump Grinding *Pruning *Roof Line Clearing. Residential and Commercial. "We Beat All Competitors' Rates." Lowest Rates. *Senior Discount. Free Estimates. *516-223-4525, 631-586-3800 www.tmgreencare.com

DIRECTV FOR $79.99/MO for 12 months with CHOICE Package. Watch your favorite live sports, news & entertainment anywhere. First 3 months of HBO Max, Cinemax, Showtime, Starz and Epix included! Directv is #1 in Customer Satisfaction (JD Power & Assoc.) Some restrictions apply. Call 1-888-534-6918

PROFESSIONAL SERVICES

marble floor

Long

Serving Nassau County 41 Years No Title, No Keys=No Problem ID Required. CALL US LAST! Call us at 516-766-0000

Finds Under $100

GREY FUTON WITH two storage drawers. Excellent condition. $75.00 516-442-2135

Vinyl

COMMODORE 64 COMPUTER, Monitor $60. Printer $25 includes Power Supply, Cables, Manual, Original Boxes. 516-445-3212

GRACO PACK-N-PLAY TURNS into napper to change with 2 sheets. Like new $90.00 516-791-2838

NEW AMERICAN TOURISTER Black Leather carry all duffle travel bag $35. 18"x12". call 516-798-2098.

LONG BEACH HISTORICAL SOCIETY Beach Yard Sale 226 W. Penn St. Sat. Sept. 10am-5pm. Date Sept. Call 516-432-1192.

All Cars Bought 24/7 FREE Pickup

Autos Wanted

Rain

ANNOUNCEMENTS

Fences

Garage Sales

Health & Fitness

BOY'S FALL/ WINTER CLOTHES: Sizes 3T, 4T. Brand new w/tags $7 each piece. 917-420-5814

Services/Repairs. Violations Removed. Free Estimates

We Buy Antiques, Fine Art & Jewelry Same Day Service, Free In-Home Evaluations, 45 Year Family Business. Licensed and Bonded, Immediate Cash Paid.

DG

Electricians tainment, Upgrades, Pools, Spas. Low 516-785-0646 Lic/Ins.

Satellite/TV Equipment

HOME IMPROVEMENTS

09/15H5

HANDYMAN

WHEELS FOR WISHES benefiting MakeA-Wish® Northeast New York. Your Car Donations Matter NOW More Than Ever! Free Vehicle Pick Up ANYWHERE. We Accept Most Vehicles Running or Not. 100% Tax Deductible. Minimal To No Human Contact. Call: (877) 798-9474. Car Donation Foundation d/b/a Wheels For Wishes. www.wheelsforwishes.org.

MERCHANDISE MART

***AAA*** AUTO BUYERS $Highest$ Ca$h Paid$. All Years/ Conditions! WE VISIT YOU! Or Donate, Tax Deduct + Ca$h. DMV ID#1303199. Call LUKE 516VAN-CARS. 516-297-2277

WIREMAN/CABLEMAN FLAT TVs mounted, Phone, TVs&Computer wiring installed & serviced, camera &stereos , HDTV – Antennas- FREE TV www.davewireman.com Call Dave 516-433-WIRE (9473) 631-667-WIRE (9473) or Text 516-353-1118

IRONING BOARD: 48X15"; Separate Restspot; Non-skid feet; Adjustable; Steel mesh top. $65 516-320-1906

Wanted To Buy

Antiques/Collectibles

HANDY DANDY

DISH TV $64.99 For 190 Channels + $14.95 High Speed Internet. Free Installation, Smart HD DVR Included, Free Voice Remote. Some restrictions apply. Promo Expires 1/21/23. 1-866-595-6967

AUTOMOBILE & MARINE

17th.

BEST SATELLITE TV with 2 Year Price Guarantee! $59.99/mo with 190 channels and 3 months free premium movie channels! Free next day installation! Call 888-508-5313

HIGHEST CA$H PAID

QUALITY FENCE INSTALLATION AT A PRICE. Fence, Fence, Wood Fence, Est. Licensed/Insured. Fence. 516-860-9555.

Education

jacket

SYL-LEE ANTIQUES www.syl-leeantiques.com 516-671-6464

Home Improvement

DRIVE OUT BREAST Cancer: Donate a car today! The benefits of donating your car or boat: Fast Free Pickup - 24hr Response Tax Deduction - Easy To Do! Call 24/7: 855-905-4755

PVC Railings. Free

ELIMINATE GUTTER CLEANING forever! LeafFilter, the most advanced debrisblocking gutter protection. Schedule a FREE LeafFilter estimate today. 15% off and 0% financing for those who qualify. PLUS Senior & Military Discounts. Call 1-877-763-2379

Aluminum Fence, Chain Link

LITTLE TYKES ADJUSTABLE basketball hoop LeBron edition new condition $15.00 (516) 462-2656

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work for the FBI or the CIA. No living human being was threatened by her slip shod record-keeping. She lived alone, and could be as messy as she wanted to be with absolutely no consequences. There are lots of people like her, who don’t much like detail work and abhor filing systems of any kind — virtual, real-time or digital.Again, live and let live. If your mind is

Will there be more canings in the Senate chamber?

You can see proof of this in his law yers’ rolling defense of keeping classified documents at Mar-a-Lago. It went from calling the dis covery of top-secret papers a hoax, to saying the FBI planted the papers, to claim ing he “declassified” them before he snatched them, to insisting he was in the pro cess of giving them back. There wasn’t one moment of concern for the yearslong work that might be undone. Not a single gesture of contrition for possibly endangering our assets overseas. I think even Aunt Maddie would have grasped the sobering consequences of such careless handling of top secrets.

Does it seem likely that Trump pored over these documents, achieving a sophis ticated level of comprehension? No. Nah. Never. He just grabbed the stuff like a hyped-up teen robber sweeping the money out of the till at a 7-Eleven on his way out. He didn’t stop to count the bills.

Nina Silber, an American history pro fessor and the president of the Society of Civil War Historians, who has written several books on the subject, said in a Boston University interview that she saw similarities between the Civil War era and now, particularly in “the tendency toward heated and extreme political rhetoric” and “the inability to find politi cal middle ground.”

hen I learned that Donald Trump’s Mar-a-Lago desk looks a lot like my Aunt Maddie’s, I wasn’t surprised. Auntie M, the unfortunate product of a disordered mind, compounded by an instinct to hoard, further complicated by a sweeping disregard for others’ opinions, dumped all her paperwork, from utility bills to MRIs of her brain, in her “junk” drawer. That was the generic term for all of her drawers and closets, which were stuffed tight with papers and States.ofwasn’tAuntfolders.Fortunately,MaddiepresidenttheUnitedShedidn’t

I don’t think he had a plan. I don’t think there was some nefarious plot in the works. Like you and the rest of Amer ica, I have observed Trump moving through his days and weeks and years in a reckless and reactive mode in which he does and says stuff and then sees what

loosey-goosey and you don’t want to pro tect your private documents, it’s all good — as long as you don’t hold the highest office in the land.

OPINIONS

From the queen to the U.S. jester-in-chief

Why all this history?

W

It isn’t even Democrats and Republi cans who are so completely at odds, as it is MAGA supporters and the rest of the country. The supporters of Donald Trump continue to deny the results of the 2020 election, despite any number of recounts, decisions by judges tossing out claims of fraud, and the public pro nouncements of Trump’s former attor ney general, Bill Barr, that the clams of a

25 202215,Septemebr—HERALDSQUARE/ELMONTFRANKLIN

I

In the two years since President Biden’s election, the divisions have become wider, and more violent. There was Jan. 6; Charlottesville, Virginia; and now the threats against FBI agents after the court-backed raid of Trump’s Mar-a-Lago resort, where he had stashed clas sified documents.

A number of prominent historians are now asking whether we are close to Civil War 2. “Civil War” is now a rallying cry by some Americans who wear the slogan on T-shirts. Others train in rural areas with assault weapons. Since the Mar-a-Lago search, media sites including Gab and Telegram use phrases such as “lock and load” and “civil war.”

Robert Reich, the U.S. labor secretary under President Bill Clinton, has said he believes a second Civil War has already begun, but less of a “war” than “a kind of benign separation analogous to unhappily married people who don’t want to go through the trauma of a for mal divorce.” Reich sees a situation in America similar to Europe’s Brexit, “a lumbering, mutual decision to go sepa rate ways on most things but remain con nected on a few big things.”

sticks, and then does the next thing. He deals with an issue in the moment and deals with any consequences later.

Just last month, Sen. Lindsey Gra ham, a Republican from South Carolina, said there would be “riots in the street” if Trump were prosecuted for taking the classified documents from the White House.And only months ago, Rep. Madison Cawthorn, a North Carolina Republican, insisted that the U.S. elections system is “rigged,” and, he added, that would “lead to one place, and that’s bloodshed.”

But when you take the oath of office as president, and swear: “I will faithfully execute the Office of President of the United States, and will to the best of my ability, preserve, pro tect and defend the Consti tution of the United States,” you need to follow all the rules for keeping state secrets secure. When you leave office, you don’t get to take classified souvenirs.

T he leadingperiodup to the Civil War has parallels.present-daynumerous

a “mistress . . . I mean the harlot, slavery.” Sumner staggered around the Senate floor, so badly beaten that his recovery took months. Brooks simply walked out of the chambers without being stopped. He was eventually censured by the House andTheresigned.country seemed to be splitting in half, as it eventually did with the advent of the Civil War.

Copyright 2022 Randi Kreiss. Randi can be reached at randik3@aol.com.

When I thought about Aunt Maddie, I realized what makes Trump tick. Nothing. Nothing is ticking. I see him as 100 percent reactive and zero percent con templative. I believe that he indiscrimi nately grabbed whatever paperwork looked of possible interest at the White House and later shoved it in the drawers at his golf club.

Because the period leading up to the War Between the States has numerous paral lels to what is taking place today.

But the bumbling president at the time, James Buchanan, did little to cool tensions. In his inaugural address in 1957, Buchanan described the sectional ism between North and South as “happi ly a matter of but little practical impor tance.” The U.S. Supreme Court, he said, would settle the matter “speedily and finally.”Thehigh court did, with the Dred Scott decision, which held that Congress had no constitutional power to deprive slavehold ers of their property rights. And Black slaves were property.Theseeds of the Civil War were sprouting.

James Bernstein is editor of the Long Beach Herald.

guests might be that nefarious person who looks for breaks in security and seiz es the moment to do harm to the United States.Ignorance, though, is not a defense. We still don’t know if Trump will be held legally accountable for flouting the laws of the country that apply to every other citizen. We don’t know how this will end, but the entire affair speaks to the man’s fantasy that he is somehow above thoseI’mlaws.thinking about this as our friends the Brits mourn the passing of Queen Elizabeth II, who reigned for 72 years and died last week at her summer home at Balmoral. She ascended the throne when she was 25 and stayed for seven decades. She was the living, breathing essence of duty to country and service to her citi zens. Propriety was the guiding principle of her reign, and she won the loyalty and love of her people by elevating civility and democracy and stepping back from any personal fanfare or glory.

“I’m troubled too by the role the (for mer) president plays in contributing to this atmosphere,” Silber said.

BERNSTEINJAMES

We, on the other hand, have been blighted in recent years by a showboating president without a moral center, a man who holds nothing sacred aside from his own endless push for power. A jester who never leaves the stage.

“stolen” election were, and are, B.S.

O ne was the living, essencebreathingof duty to country. The other? Well . . .

From my point of view, for what it’s worth, we have been ahead of Europe in many ways since the American Revolu tion.Let’s not begin following the continent now.

He is not a thinker. I don’t believe he ever worried that unfriendly eyes might fall on these protected documents, or that someone in the crowds of Mar-a-Lago

n the mid-1800s, there were scorch ing debates taking place in the U.S. Congress between politicians in the North, who opposed slavery, and those in the South, who favored the insti tution.In1856, things got so heated that one U.S. senator, Charles Sumner, an antislavery Massachusetts Republican, was brutally beaten with a cane PrestonCongressmanbyBrooks, a South Butlerremoved,cousinBrooks’sAndrewCarolinainsultedSumnerbeforeDemocrat.CarolinaJusttheattack,hadSouthSen.Butler,firstoncesayinghadtaken

KREISSRANDI

Garden

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As the pandemic subsided and schools reopened, many school adminis trations wondered aloud why newfound resources like Zoom had to go. And somewhere, the idea was born to use the remote classrooms set up during the pandemic to keep schools operating on days where weather made it impossible to step onto campus.

It’s difficult to determine how — and when — the modern snow day came into being, except that it likely required the means to communicate a delay or can cellation — telephones or radios. Today, such alerts are spread through more direct means, like text messages and email.But the excitement those alerts gen erate is almost certainly no different in 2022 than it was in 1922.

Sorry, but those are things kids sim ply can’t do if they are required to sit in front of their computers all day. And let’s not forget that virtual classrooms are no longer the norm — imagine all the wasted time that will be spent get

New York City has completely done away with snow days, but the city should follow Long Island’s lead. Sure, there are fewer snow days than there were before the pandemic, but our dis tricts are working hard to balance the need to educate with their students’ need to just live sometimes. And they are doing the right thing with a hybrid model that essentially splits the differ ence.Keep the snow days. At least some of them. They’re not just a thing of won der, but a chance to create lasting mem ories, and a fresh appreciation of the value of an unexpected breather.

To the Editor:

That meant no more snow days — a concept that, at least for several school districts in Nassau County, was shortlived. While not ignoring the benefits of remote learning, these districts decided to keep at least some snow days in place, believing that there’s a benefit to pro viding that unexpected day off for their students and teachers.

I found Ilana Greenberg’s op-ed, “Scientists grapple with meaning of life. Why should judges?” (Aug. 18-24) extremely thoughtful and well written. She showed her willingness to research all sides of an issue. In today’s climate, that is very rare. It is clear she has searched much for answers concerning the science and the exploration of the age-old question of when life begins, and I hope she continues to do so.

ting all the students logged back in effectively, when many are simply out of practice doing so.

Greenberg dealt wisely with a tricky issue

We live in a world in which we are too quick to make deci sions, and then remain totally closed to discussion or writ ings that may differ, even as new research continues. Sadly,

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HERALD EDITORIAL

ournalist and bestselling author Susan Orlean once described a snow day as “literally and figura tively” something that “falls from the sky — unbidden — and seems like a thing of Unlesswonder.”yougrew up somewhere snow didn’t exist, you likely woke up many a winter morning as a child, excited to see nothing but glistening white outside your window that wasn’t there the night before. That almost guaranteed the one thing nearly all schoolkids hope for dur ing the coldest months: a snow day.

HERALDSQUARE/ELMONTFRANKLIN—202215,Septemebr 26 Franklin square/elmont HERALD Established FranklinIncorporating1998theSquare/ElmontRecord Brian Pfail Senior Reporter

But as part of the “new normal” cre ated by the coronavirus pandemic, it seemed the snow day was becoming a relic of the past. Lockdowns closed schools, forcing millions of students across the country — and around the world — to turn to technology. Thanks to computers, web cams and the inter net, lessons could continue without the need to step inside a classroom.

rhonda

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LETTERS

Schools are right to resurrect the snow day

And what other severe weather event could kids enjoy more than freshly fall en snow — and a lot of it? Sledding, for example, is a pastime no one young or old should be denied. Or building snow men. Or constructing snow forts. Or cre ating snow angels.

It’s not that education isn’t important — it is. But a snow day isn’t a lost day. It’s a delayed day. Any class missed because of snow in the winter months is made up in the spring. And if Mother Nature is kind and doesn’t interfere with classes, those spring days become time off for students and teachers any way.All of us deserve a pleasant surprise, like a snow day, once in a while. And all of us deserve a chance to enjoy the world around us, even if it’s just for a day here and there.

Fax: (516) 569-4942

Trump repeatedly singled out Bush — the one-time frontrunner who counts both a father and a brother as one-time occupants of the Oval Office — in a move that signified that Trump was going against the Republican Party of old.

How about Biden as a failed presi dent? Inflation has skyrocketed, but so has job growth. The economy screams recession, but if it’s out there, no one has quite found it.

OPINIONS

t’s magic.establishment2016recapturethatdoubtfulhecouldhisanti-

FRAMEWORK by Tim Baker

The possibilities are endless, and will enrich her life.

MARIE COYLE Glen Cove

both major parties for some time. That was what allowed him to blitz through a field of respected Republican politicians like former Florida Gov. Jeb Bush and Sen. Marco Rubio.

O’Connell asked a great question

I hope Greeberg continues to research and look for answers on the Roe v. Wade ruling. I would also suggest that she Google “A lifelong connection that starts in the womb.” It was written on Aug. 7, 2017, and adds a whole new dimension to what we know about cells in utero. Our technology, showing how life begins and grows from conception, gets better every day. She might want to read “Unplanned,” by Abby Johnson, about what she came to know, and how.

To the ThanksEditor:to

likes of West Virginia Sen. Joe Manchin.

That didn’t stop the then president from trying to link Biden with socialism anyway, but no one was buying it. At least not enough to swing the gener al election in Trump’s favor.

So how will Trump frame 2024? Can he recapture any of his 2016 anti-estab lishment magic? That’s doubtful, because he and many of his acolytes are the establishment.Maybethistime he can get Biden-as-asocialist to stick. Biden is hardly the poster child of anything too hard left. And even his more progressive, Sandersesque agenda items have been torn apart in Congress — with little argument from Biden himself. The late President Lyn don Johnson is rolling in his grave at how passive-aggressive Biden is with the

this is true in all areas of science and philosophy, and prevents better under standing and clarification of many “truths” that no longer stand up in our ever-changing world.

Essentially, Trump was always running against “crooked” Hillary Clinton and the pre-Trump estab lishment — even when Clinton wasn’t in the race and the establishment was Trump’s own.

ty’s nomination of Clinton for president, however, played right into Trump’s cam paign message: As the anti-establish ment candidate, who was a better repre sentation of the establishment — and the perfect villain — than Hillary Clinton?

he likelihood that former presi dent Donald Trump will run again in 2024 seems to increase by the day. Unless the Mar-a-Lago raid turns up something that leads to a criminal indictment, it would be some what anticlimactic for Trump to have hyped up the imagined grand announce ment, only to conclude with, “I’m not acrossbeentimentestablishmentizedOne.2016HillarySecretaryagainstrunis,running.”So,thequestionwhowouldheagainst?TrumpranformerofStateClintoninfromDayHecapitalonananti-senthathadpercolatingAmericain

Who and what would Trump run against in 2024?

And Biden has been on a bit of a roll lately. Some key measures he has cham pioned, tackling inflation and the envi ronment, have been signed into law, and he just took out a key terrorist in the MiddleBidenEast.may have led a disastrous pullout from Afghanistan last year, but now he has finessed the war in Ukraine to make Russian dictator Vladimir Putin look like the monster he is without put ting a single pair of American boots on the ground there.

LETTERS

27 202215,Septemebr—HERALDSQUARE/ELMONTFRANKLIN

Outside of former New York City Mayor Michael Bloomberg, Biden was the only candidate who never aligned with Sanders. So, in nomi nating Biden, Democrats went against Trump’s wish es.

John O’Connell for his op-ed in the Sept. 1-7 issue, “Where has all the competence gone?” He precisely voiced my sentiments and, I’m sure, those of many Americans around us. It is indeed very sad that we are amazed when we witness something being done competently, on time and without fuss. It is even more distressing that the pros pects of any improvement are quite dim.

While there was a brief time in which it seemed that it would indeed be Trump

But how will the former president present his message? Biden isn’t exactly a great president, but he’s not a failed one, either. If Trump gets past his legal troubles to make another run for the Oval Office, his only chance to come out on top could very well require changing his playbook completely.

SERGE NEDELTSCHEFF Sea Cliff

Answers may not be found, but at the right time and in the right place, the truth will find the person who is looking for them. And please don’t leave out Gen esis 1:27 and Isaiah 49. It’s my hope that Greenberg will be rewarded with the continued gifts in the goodness and kind ness that she has shown in her writing.

Michael Malaszczyk is a Herald reporter covering Wantagh and Seaford. Com ments about this column? mmalaszczyk@ liherald.com.

Sen. Bernie Sanders had similar suc cess against Clinton in 2016, albeit not quite as successful. The Democratic Par

Thoughts or comments about our stories? Send letters to the editor to execeditor@liherald.com

Whether they’re ready to migrate or not — Wantagh

Former President Trump will have to run against President Biden, and run ning against an incumbent president ain’t easy: Only 10 presidents in Ameri can history have lost re-election — and one of them was Trump.

I

T

MALASZCZYKMICHAEL

Trump apparently feared the idea of Clinton even considering the Ver mont senator as her run ning mate, calling Sanders “the only one I didn’t want her to pick” — perhaps aware of how much Sand ers could have disrupted Trump’s campaign mes sage.But everything changed in 2020. How could Trump run against the establish ment when he was now the establishment? So he tried a different approach. The entrenched elite wasn’t the boogeyman this time around; it was socialism. And as far as Trump and his supporters were concerned, “Democrat” and “socialist” were interchangeable terms.Trump was almost gleeful when Sand ers — a self-described “democratic socialist” — was winning the early pri maries in 2020. Trump strategist Michael Caputo even said that “the only thing better for Trump than Bernie getting screwed out of the nomination (is) if Bernie wins the nomination.”

vs. Sanders, Democrats ultimately went a different route. The anti-Bernie route. The Joe Biden route.

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