_________________ FREEPORT _________________
HERALD Also serving Roosevelt
Annual canoe race on Aug. 4
Dems open office in Hempstead
WIC Awareness Walk coming up
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Vol. 89 No. 31
JUlY 25 - 31, 2024
$1.00
Reworld and SPLASH clean the waterfront “Our mission is to reimagine the waste we all create — it’s about building a sustainable I n a b o l d i n i t i at ive t o future for everyone,” Maureen enhance the environment, Early, lead community relations Reworld joined forces with specialist at Reworld, said. Reworld, which was previOperation SPLASH on July 17 to combat pollution in the ously known as Covanta, now of fers a broader waterfront surrange of waste rounding Freesolutions, accordpor t’s Nautical ing to Early. Mile. “We rebranded T h e F re e po r t recently after evolvbased Operation ing into more than SPLASH, which just energy from stands for Stop Polwaste, which is how luting Littering everyone knew us And Save Harbors, as Covanta,” she is a non-profit orgasaid, about the comnization dedicated pany’s nameto cleaning local change announced waterways, removearlier this year in ing more than three April. “We are now million pounds of a broader waste trash since the solutions company group was created RoB WeltNeR with many more in 1990. The group’s offerings outside of partnership with President, energy from waste, the c o m p a n y operation SPLASH l i ke w a s t e w a t e r Reworld over the treatment, renewpast decade has facilitated regular marsh clean- able fuel sources, (and more).” Although Reworld doesn’t ups during the summer season. have a facility in Freeport, the The initiative is part of Reworld’s broader commitment company’s Hempstead facility to investing in Long Island com- plays a crucial role in the area. “We process over a million munities by upgrading local habitats. Continued on page 5
By MoHAMMAD RAFIQ
mrafiq@liherald.com
W
Tim Baker/Herald
dozens of police officers paid their respects to Hempstead town Councilman Chris Carini at a Mass on Monday.
A farewell to public servant and family man Chris Carini By JoRDAN VAlloNe & CHARleS SHAW of the Freeport Herald
If any message was clear at Hempstead Town Councilman Chris Carini’s funeral Mass on Monday, it was the one conveyed in the words of the Rev. Steven Camp, who said simply, “He was there.” Carini, a champion of quality-of-life initiatives in Hempstead and the 5th Councilmanic District, was laid to rest following a service at St. William the Abbot Roman Catholic Church in Seaford. The 5th District includes Seaford, Wantagh, and parts of Bellmore, Merrick, Freeport, Point Lookout and Lido Beach.
Hundreds of family members, friends, elected officials and community leaders filled the church to pay their respects to Carini, while dozens of police officers from departments in and around Nassau County ensured that Carini, a retired Port Authority police officer, received a fitting send-off. The longtime Seaford resident died unexpectedly on July 14, at age 49, while visiting family in Florida. Carini’s body was flown home from Florida on July 17, and officers from the Port Authority JFK Commissary, at Kennedy Airport, gathered to greet him with love and prayers. Police officers stood on the tarmac Continued on page 4
hat we’ve been doing for the past 34 years ... people’s garbage in bays, beaches and salt marshes.