Lynbrook/East Rockaway Herald 07-08-2021

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_______ Lynbrook/east rockaway ______

COMMUNITY UPDATE Infections as of July 6

3,306

Infections as of June 30 3,304

$1.00

HERALD Also serving Bay Park

ERFD saluted for service

Student artists honored for works

Newest Eagle Scouts take flight

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VOL. 28 NO. 28

JULY 8 - 14, 2021

County provides funds to restore the Western Bays County Executive Laura Curran said the Covid-19 crisis has shown officials how important it The Nassau Legislature is to commit to capital projects recently approved the county’s that are vital to residents’ 2021-24 capital improvement health, safety and quality of life, plan, part of which will focus on which includes restoring the the restoration of the Western Western Bays. She also said she Bays. The initiative was grateful that the includes investments County Legislature in infrastructure, approved the fourenvironmental proyear project. tection and economThe plan “not ic development. only seeks to With suppor t improve our infrafrom New York state, structure and the county is moving resolve critical forward with up to needs,” Curran said, $800 million in projaccording to a news ects to remove harmrelease, “but makes ful discharges and THE NASSAU improvements that improve water quali- COUNTY Legislature attract new residents t y i n t h e S o u t h approved County and businesses so we S h o r e ’s We s t e r n Executive Laura can continue to meet Bays. The Western Curran’s four-year the challenges of Bays Resiliency Ini- capital improvement retaining our tax tiative is the largest plan, which will partly base. The 2021-24 capenvironmental in- focus on restoring ital improvement vestment the county plan continues my the Western Bays. has made in many commitment to decades, and it will restoring and translate into an economic boost improving infrastructure while for the region, officials said. The investing in big-picture projects planned upgrades will clean the that will improve the county for waterways, restore marshland, generations to come.” improve storm resiliency and The Western Bays are the increase the number of shellfishing beds. CONTINUED ON PAGE 5

By MIKE SMOLLINS msmollins@liherald.com

Courtesy Meagher family

FORMER EAST ROCKAWAY village and school board Trustee Dr. Richard Meagher died on June 25, at age 82. He left his mark on the community in many ways through volunteering.

E.R. bids farewell to community man Former mayor, school board president dies By MIKE SMOLLINS msmollins@liherald.com

Whether Dr. Richard Meagher was involved in East Rockaway village politics, volunteering for a variety of local organizations or serving in the school district, he would do just about anything to help East Rockaway, family members and friends said. “He was a person who, when someone said there was a problem, he asked people to come together to help fix it,”

his daughter Heather said. “If there was money needed, he helped to fundraise. If there was an event needed, he helped to run it. My dad very much wanted to be a ‘yes’ person in a ‘no’ world. He never wanted to hear that a bad situation couldn’t be fixed or that you couldn’t even try.” Meagher, a former East Rockaway mayor and school board president, died on June 25. He was 82. His daughter said that nothing rivaled Meagher’s

love for his late wife, Gail, his children and their spouses and his grandchildren, but the village came in a close second. In addition to serving on the school and village boards, Meagher was a lifetime member of the Kiwanis Club and founder of many community organizations and initiatives. He was born Oct. 8, 1938, at what is now Mount Sinai South Nassau hospital in Oceanside. He grew up in East Rockaway and raised his CONTINUED ON PAGE 7


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