Oceanside/Island Park Herald 02-02-2023

Page 1

AlIsoN ERICKsoN, pRojECt coordinator for the Oceanside SAFE Coalition, presents Nick Wollweber with the Outstanding Youth Award for his many contributions to the coalition.

Coalition award winners stress the power of listening

Nick Wollweber and Daniel Rinaldi have something in common.

They both received an award from the Oceanside SAFE Coalition, a drug use prevention and awareness

He’s aspiring to perfection

Oceanside High School alumnus wins cheer national competition

Matthew Guglielmo made history when he became the first male cheerleader to compete at Oceanside High School, where in his senior year he served as cheerleading team captain and was named to All County. Now, as a class of 2022 alumnus, he has added to his accolades by becoming a collegiate national champion as a member of the University of Delaware cheerleading team at the Universal Cheerleaders Association National Competition.

A three-year varsity athlete at Oceanside, Guglielmo, 18, was named to the All-Long Island second cheerleading team and All Division as a junior. He then sent out a highlight reel that led to him to being recruited by the University of Delaware coaches.

His journey started, however, with gymnastics in middle school where a cheer coach convinced him to try cheerleading out.

leader at Oceanside, he thought it was intriguing — but he said it wasn’t the reason he tried out.

“To me, it was just me doing what I wanted to do,” he said, “And I thought it was fun, and I really enjoyed it. But then my freshman year of high school, it kind of, like, clicked a little bit more because I was the first guy on Oceanside cheer, and started to compete on a competition routine. So that’s when it kind of, like, hit me that I’m making history for the district.”

If other young men want to try out, Guglielmo said he hopes “they know that they could do that and there’s nothing against it.”

organization founded in Oceanside in 2015. More important, both are using the power of human connection and vulnerability to fight stigmas associated with drug use and mental health.

Wollweber and Rinaldi were honored at a recent event that looked back on the

many contributions the coalition made last year, including its 10-years-later Hurricane Sandy coastal cleanup and its ever-popular Prevention Night. Wollweber, 18, received the Outstanding Youth Award, and Rinaldi, 43, was presented with the Coalition

Continued on page 9

“I kind of just fell in love with it and then stuck with it and tried out for high school,” he said. “Finding cheer was kind of the perfect sport for me.”

When he heard the news that he was the first-ever male cheer-

During his junior year, Guglielmo started to plan for college and realized two things: He wanted to keep pursuing cheer, and he wanted to major in landscape architecture. The University of Delaware, where he just finished his first semester, has excellent programs for both. While architecture is his main goal, he’d like to cheer on the side in the future and possibly coach.

His first semester ended on a high note, with his national competition win, confirming Continued on page 4

Vol. 58 No. 6 FEBRUARY 2-8, 2023 $1.00 Hospital opens new trauma unit Page 5 Flach sentencing delayed, again Page 19 HERALD Oceanside/island park
Courtesy Oceanside SAFE Coalition
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Peter King debuts new opinion column

Former congressman has no intention of slowing down in retirement

Not even retirement can slow down Peter King. After 28 years in the U.S. House — including a two-year stint as chair of the House Homeland Security Committee — as well as more than two decades serving on both the Hempstead town council and as Nassau County comptroller, King finds himself busier than ever.

He’s working with a Washington law firm, and does consulting work for Northwell Health. He makes regular appearances on the Newsmax cable channel, as well as John Catsimatidis’s 77WABC radio station.

But now King is adding one more job to that list as a new regular columnist for Herald Community Newspapers. The former congressman’s first official piece appears in this week’s Opinions pages.

“It’s not like I have to catch a plane to get to Washington, or I’m at the whim of what’s the last vote going to be on Thursday night or Friday night,” King said. “I pretty much plan my own schedule. And the best feeling I had — and it took me about a month to get used to — is waking up in the morning and knowing I can go back to sleep if I want to.”

These days, King finds himself solely

FORMER U.S. REP. Peter King has kept himself busy since retiring from Congress in 2021, from his regular appearance on 77WABC radio, to now becoming a regular opinion columnist for Herald Community Newspapers. His first official piece — singing the praises of freshman U.S. Rep. Anthony D’Esposito — can be found in this week’s Opinions section.

focused on life here at home. But for nearly three decades, the congressman was caught between the two worlds of Washington and his district back in New York.

The trick in the beginning was making

sure he never lost sight of why he was on the House floor in the first place.

“When you’re in Washington, you’re still responsible for a lot of local issues, because the local mayors and supervisors

and town boards — they’re going to be calling you and reaching out for help,” King said. “I think with a number of members of Congress, they’re so concerned with the international and national aspects of it, they forget the guy living down the block.

“The guy that lives in Highland Park. The guy that lives in Seaford. That’s where you base comes from. So, really, the challenge is to keep all of those things in your mind, and be able to sort through them all.”

King has made no secret about his support of U.S. Rep. Anthony D’Esposito, whose congressional district covers much of what King’s did back in the day. In fact, his first column focuses on the high hopes King has of his protégé, and how the sky’s the limit for the former town councilman.

“I mean, Anthony, we talk several times a week,” King said. “I don’t want to sound like I am telling him what to do, or giving him some great advice. But maybe one thing I can be most helpful on is telling him early on which members of Congress you can pay attention to, and which others to just ignore.

“Some of them you try to take seriously, but then you realize after a month or two that these guys are cranks, and nobody else is listening to them, except you.”

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Local startup competes on reality TV show

Garrett Guttenberg, 36, had two back surgeries, a disastrous house fire, and a death in the family in the span of about a month. He was at a point he was asking the powers that be, “what else do you got.” But he turned his tragedy into a business, Seaview Adjusting Group Inc., from his experience because he wasn’t happy with how his claims were being managed. His startup business was recently featured in the reality television show “The Blox,” which came on the Blox App on Jan. 26.

Graduating from Oceanside High School in 2005, Guttenberg went to the University of Albany and obtained a Bachelor of Science in finance and business management. He had plans to go into finance, but “the market crashed in 2008 and I went to law school.” He then graduated Touro Law School in 2012, but “two months before graduation I told everybody I’m not practicing law. That I’m going to go on my own and build my own insurance business.”

He became a broker, writing property, casualty, homeowner, auto and business policies. Everything was going smoothly until 2019.

“I had moved from Long Beach back to Oceanside, and I was in the house about nine months. When Earlier on a Sunday morning, I noticed my house was on fire. So, I got my wife and my one-year-old out of the house. We just got the front door and within five minutes the entire house was in flames. We lost the whole house,” he said. He now lives in Island Park.

Not happy the way the claim was being handled and finding things other adjustors were missing, he decided to fire the adjustors and file the claims himself. Soon after, he opened Seaview Adjusting Group Inc. in 2021 with his brother-in-law Eric Stroud a “token adjustor” with a construction and engineering background. Now he and four other guys jump when they hear of a fire, pipe break or flood.

“I really wanted to bring my personal experience, and I’ve lived through a lot, so when I walk into a fire the people think their life’s over and they lost everything. I say, ‘guys, I was okay, look at his pictures of my new house. My house was worse than this, everybody’s safe, you’re going to be fine,’” Gutteberg said, likening the role to being a therapist. The reliability to situations they cover help them help people settling their claims make sure the insurance companies are paying what they owe.

Things were going business as usual until Guttenberg saw on Facebook an advertisement looking for startups. He wrote in about his company and that his house burned down so he brings empathy with him on calls. Within 24 hours producers were calling him wanting to talk to “this guy from New York.” After a few rounds of interviews, he was in. But in what? A Shark Tank meets Apprentice show hosted by MTV’s Wes Bergmann with 60 entrepreneurs competing against each other for a week straight.

Guttenberg and Stroud flew to Kansas City where Bergmann invests in hundreds of local businesses in his hometown in a program, he calls the “startup accelerator.” There both were filmed sitting through classes on various topics that would help their business like online marketing, software, growing and investing. And after each lesson, all the groups would have ten minutes to put a presentation together for the judges. In the end, they were in the top third of all 60 companies.

“It’s emotional,” Guttenberg said, “Some of the judges are crying with people and it’s TV, so like maybe we didn’t cry enough. I don’t know.” But the experience was unforgettable, and on the plane ride back Guttenberg was already hiring new people and implementing ideas from the workshops. “That’s how amped up we are,” he said.

“When I left, I realized there was so many things within our business that we weren’t doing and if we wanted to really grow, we had to make changes,” Guttenberg said. He reached out to Oceanside business owners to form more collaborative bonds.

w here to watch

For those interested in entrepreneurship, Guttenberg says, “If you’re not worried and concerned, you’re probably not starting the right business. Because entrepreneurship is the hardest, most challenging thing that somebody can approach. There’s nothing easier than just showing up at work, nine to five. But if you’re passionate about it, and you’re nervous and worried and scared, that’s probably going to be the right business.”

Just remember, sometimes “the clock doesn’t stop.”

FOuNdeRs OF seAVIew Adjusting Group Inc. Eric Stroud and Garrett Guttenberg can be seen on the Blox App competing.

IN tOtAl, 60 startups competed against each other in a Shark Tank meets Apprentice style reality TV show called The Blox. Seaview Adjusting Group Inc. from Oceanside were in the top three percent of participants.

FOuNdeRs GARRett GutteNBeRG and Eric Stroud got used to the constant filming throughout the week of filming.

3 OCEANSIDE/ISLAND PARK HERALD — February 2, 2023
Photos courtesy of Garrett Guttenberg The entire series can be watched for free on The Blox mobile app, available on Google Play and the App Store.

Protecting Your Future with

Special Needs Children and Grandchildren

Parents or grandparents of a disabled child should leave assets in a Special Needs Trust, to avoid the child being disqualified from government benefits, such as SSI and Medicaid. The reasoning behind these Special Needs Trusts is simple — prior to the protection now afforded by these trusts, parents would simply disinherit their disabled children rather than see them lose their benefits. Since the state wasn’t getting the inheritance monies anyway, why not allow it to go to the disabled child for his or her extra needs, above and beyond what the state supplies.

These trusts, however, offer traps for the unwary. Since payments to the child will generally reduce their SSI payments dollar for dollar, trustees of such trusts should be advised to make payments directly to the providers of goods and services. Preserving SSI benefits is crucial since eligibility for SSI determines eligibility for Medicaid.

In other words, if SSI is lost the recipient also loses their Medicaid benefits. In addition, any benefits previously paid by Medicaid may be recovered. As such, one also has to be mindful of bequests from well-meaning grandparents. Similarly, if a sibling dies without a will, a

‘I learned everything I knew from them’

share of their estate may go to the special needs brother or sister by law. The Special Needs Trust must be carefully drafted so that it only allows payments for any benefits over and above what the government provides.

There are two kinds of Special Needs Trusts – first party and third party. The first party trust is set up by a parent, grandparent, legal guardian or court using the child’s own money, either through earnings, an inheritance that was left directly to them or, perhaps, a personal injury award. Recent changes in the law allow the special needs child to establish their own first party Special Needs Trust if they are legally competent to engage in contractual matters. These first party trusts require a “payback” provision, meaning that on the death of the child beneficiary, the trust must pay back the state for any government benefits received.

A third party trust is usually set up by a parent or grandparent, using their own money. Here, no “payback” provision is required because it was not the child’s own money that funded the trust and the parent or grandparent had no obligation to leave any assets to the child. On the death of the child beneficiary, the balance of the trust is paid out to named beneficiaries.

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continued from front page

for him that all his hours of practice paid off and reaffirming that he’s on the right track.

“You spend like the entire year training for this competition,” he said, “And we do have games to, like, show off our skills and, like, perform, but it’s not the same. Whereas like with UCA nationals, you just compete, like once your finals routine is like the last time you competed. So, everything leads up to that moment. So, there is a lot of pressure. And it’s just knowing that you and your team are going to do well, when it comes down to that.”

Being on a team with more seasoned athletes was intimidating for him, he said, but, he added, “You have to trust them and know that they’re going to do their job and you’re going to do yours. Cheer is very dangerous stuff, especially as years go on and people are trying more things. So, concussions are common, broken bones, broken fingers.”

The main goal is to make everything look as effortless as possible while putting the most effort in as you can. “You have to make the crowd believe that you could do (a cheer) 10 out of 10 times even if you can’t,” he said. “You have to do the hardest skills that you have that are still clean and look good.”

Guglielmo said he couldn’t do it without the Oceanside coaches that got him there – Kristen Pizzuto, assistant coach; Jillian Edelman junior varsity coach; and Samantha Chaback, varsity coach. All continue to cheer him on from afar.

“I learned everything I knew from them. They gave me the foundation to get where I am,” he said.

“Matty has made history for Oceanside not only as our first competitive male cheerleader but also our first collegiate national champion,” said Chaback, “We are so proud of him.”

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Courtesy of Matthew Guglielmo Matthew GuGlielMo with his Universal Cheerleaders Association National Competition award, which he won as a member of the University of Delaware cheerleading team.
February 2, 2023 — OCEANSIDE/ISLAND PARK HERALD 4 1203184
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New trauma unit gives nurses better edge against time

In trauma unit 3 lies a 30-year-old man with obvious head trauma. He was hit by a car going way too fast on Merrick Road. “Can we establish an airway” a nurse yells, “I’ve got the glidescope” hollers another. Only the man in this scenario is just pretending, christening the new Mount Sinai South Nassau trauma unit with a fictitious trauma support emergency incident. But, as the hospital nurses know, many real-life similar cases will come in and out of the state-of-the-art ward.

The enemy the hospital is fighting with their $50 million expansion is time. The new trauma unit features a game changing open concept design plan and easier methods of communication that will cut down lost time. From gunshot wounds to emergency surgeries or even labor delivery and pediatric care, the nine new private room can handle anything thrown at them, including mass causality events.

“The beauty about this space is it allows us not only take care of trauma patients, but we can also take care of anybody that severely sick, so patients that come in with cardiac arrest or respiratory arrest. Having the space to be able to take care of these patients really makes a difference and allows us to do our work more easily,” said Margaret Puya, trauma program manager.

Time is critical in traumatic injuries. Once the ED is alerted of an impending arrival, the Trauma Team is mobilized through a paging system to immediately receive the patient. From admission to rehabilitation, the goal is to make the patient’s journey to recovery as seamless as possible.

Each room has operating room lights, rapid infusers, intubating equipment, ultrasound equipment, and standard procedural equipment. As well as things for

the airway, chest, abdominal trauma, and orthopedic needs for fractures and more.

The new trauma unit is near and dear to Adhi Sharma, president of Mount Sinai, since he worked in trauma. He said seeing years long plans start to come to fruiting in this halfway point has nurses buzzing with anticipation.

“They've been working under confined conditions because I construction,” Sharma said, “So any expansion for them is freedom and this is a freedom to function in a clinical environment that supports the patient needs. We’re restructuring how we are going to provide care in the future, and making the hospital ready for all of the future advancements in science

CONstRuCtION

that will allow us to take even more care for our community and have patients here locally.”

He said the goal of the $50 million dollar expansion project is to be able to be a tertiary care center, so that residents don't have to go to Manhattan for expert care, they can get it in their backyard, and their families can visit them locally as well.

Upon its completion in the summer of 2025, the $ expansion project, which started in 2016, will nearly double the size of Mount Sinai South Nassau’s Emergency Department and increase its capacity from 65,000 annual emergency patient visits to an estimated 80,000. The total cost of this phase of the expansion is $5 million.

teAm memBeR Fernando Lamb pretends to be the first patient in the Mount Sinai South Nassau trauma unit.
5 OCEANSIDE/ISLAND PARK HERALD — February 2, 2023 1202375
Karina Kovac/Herald

Town redistricting falls short of new map

Recommendation not enough, civic groups say

After several rounds of blistering public hearings and politically pressurized back-and-forths, a temporary redistricting commission’s efforts to explore how new political lines should be drawn for the Town of Hempstead ended last month with its final recommendation. Their choice? Nothing.

After weighing the options between a preliminary map pitched by Hempstead town officials, or alternatives by local civic and law groups, the three-member commission officially urged town lawmakers to produce a final map that keeps communities of interest intact. Still, it stopped short of putting forward an actual map for the town to consider.

“We really sat, each one of us, and it truly was a hearing,” commission chair Gary Hudes told the audience. “We listened.

“I think, in both cases, there is a common thread we are seeing, and that is the idea of keeping communities whole and making them more compact.”

The move was met with a sharp uproar from the small crowd, dashing expectations for a final green light for a town council map.

Mimi Pierre-Johnson, the founder of the Elmont Cultural Center, felt the commission had turned a corner by formally acknowledging the faults of the town’s proposal. But they fell short when they did not deliver on a solid recommendation.

“Our hopes (were) snatched by the fact that they refused to stand behind one of the proposed alternative maps and tweak it as needed,” Pierre-Johnson said. “The resolution is not enough to satisfy everything the public raised a concern to.”

Since the first day of the redistricting process, concerns raised by voters and community activist groups circle back to a single theme: District lines should be redrawn to have a more balanced demographic representation of up to three “minority-majority” districts, and compact historically and culturally whole communities. This is something the Elmont Cultural Center and Legal Defense Fund said they ensured with their five alternative maps.

Commission members admitted that not a single proposed map addressed all the issues people have put forth at various meetings, but claimed the recommendation was enough to communicate the gist of everyone’s concerns.

As it stands, the current map produced

by the town-hired Skyline Demographic Consultants ensures the town’s 22 villages — with the exception of the Village of Hempstead — remain whole in accordance with the municipal “home rule” law. And communities such as East Meadow, Franklin Square, North Valley Stream, Baldwin, Uniondale and Woodmere each contain portions of two council districts, while West Hempstead contains portions of three.

Critics, however, raised doubts about the map’s compliance with federal and state voting rights protections — specifically the Voting Rights Act and the John R. Lewis Voting Rights Act of New York,

signed last summer by Gov. Kathy Hochul.

Michael Pernick of the Legal Defense Fund, civil rights attorney Frederick Brewington, Randolph McLaughlin and LatinoJustice PRLDEF argued splitting the Black and Latino communities in Elmont and Valley Stream into two separate majority-white districts dilutes minority voting power.

“Over 38 percent of the population in the Town of Hempstead is Black or Latino,” the law professionals wrote in a letter to the commission. “But this demographic can only elect the candidate of their choice in one out of the six districts.”

Pernick and Brewington warned that

Ana Borruto/Herald photos

THE PROPOSED MAP from Hempstead town officials showing where town council districts will be placed was created by Skyline Consulting. It has drawn criticism from civic groups and law experts for what they claim violate federal and state voting rights protections, saying the map fails to keep communities whole, and continues to crack minority neighborhoods into multiple districts.

THE ELMONT CULTURAL Center’s ‘Blue Bird Plan’ keeps Elmont and Valley Stream in one minoritymajority district when it comes to representation on the Hempstead town council, while maps proposed by Hempstead town officials do not.

if Hempstead finalizes the current map as it stands, it could expose the town to costly litigation — all at taxpayers’ expense.

A statement released by the commission acknowledged the Skyline proposal was “problematic in that it splits Hempstead and Uniondale, Baldwin, East Meadow, Franklin Square, West Hempstead and North Valley Stream. It fails to keep the communities of North Valley Stream and Elmont together, and fails to put the communities of Merrick and North Merrick into a single district.

“It is not sufficiently compact, and compactness is an important redistricting criteria under the ‘home rule’ message.”

February 2, 2023 — OCEANSIDE/ISLAND PARK HERALD 6
The resolution is not enough to satisfy everything the public raised a concern to.
MIMI PIERREJOHNSON
founder, Elmont Cultural Center

THE TOP 3 FINALISTS IN

KIDS & EDUCATION

ADULT EDUCATION - CONTINUING ED:

Hempstead Adult & Community Education Program

Hofstra University

Molloy University

ART SCHOOL:

Hue Studio

Long Island High School for the Arts

The Art Studio

BEAUTY SCHOOL:

Long Island Nail Skin & Hair Institute

Long Island Beauty School

Nassau BOCES Joseph M. Barry Career & Technical Education Center

CHARTER/PAROCHIAL/PRIVATE:

Bellmore United Methodist Nursery School

Kellenberg Memorial High School

Lawrence Woodmere Academy

COLLEGE PREP SERVICES/ADVISORS:

College Connection

Lockwood College Prep

Pinnacle College Consultants

COLLEGE PRESIDENT:

Dr. Susan Poser - Hofstra University

James Lentini - Molloy University

Maria P. Conzatti - Nassau Community College

COLLEGE/UNIVERSITY:

Hofstra University

Molloy University

Nassau Community College

DANCE SCHOOL:

Dance Workshop

Hart & Soul Performing Arts and Dance School

Long Island Academy of Dance

DAY CAMP:

Big Chief Day School & Camp

Coleman Country Day Camp

Lawrence Woodmere Academy

Rolling River Day Camp

DAY CARE:

Big Chief Day School & Camp

Five Towns Early Learning Center

Our Kids Place

DRIVING SCHOOL:

Bell Auto Driving School

East Meadow Driving School

Prosperity Auto Driving School, Inc

GYMNASTICS CENTER:

All Stars Gymnastics Inc

Gold Medal Gymnastics Center

Platinum Athletic

B&B/INN:

Hampton Inn Jericho-Westbury

Holiday Inn Westbury

Ram’s Head Inn

Southampton Inn

EVENT VENUE:

Barnum Ballroom

Bayview Catering on the Water Venue

Epic Escape Rooms LI

HOTEL:

Allegria Hotel

HIGH SCHOOL PRINCIPAL:

Alexandra Greenberg - George W. Hewlett H.S.

Jennifer Lagnado-Papp - Lawrence H.S.

Richard Schaffer - East Rockaway H.S.

KIDS BIRTHDAY PARTIES:

Epic Escape Rooms LI

Long Island Children’s Museum

Royal Princess Prep Party Company

LEARNING CENTER/TUTOR:

Cornerstone Behavioral Services

Mathnasium

The Coder School

MARTIAL ARTS:

Champions Martial Arts

Uly Karate & Fitness

Warren Levi Martial Arts & Fitness

MUSIC SCHOOLS/CLASSES:

Our Kids Place Hewlett

School of Rock

The Children’s Orchestra Society

NURSERY SCHOOL:

Bellmore United Methodist Nursery School

Our Kids Place Hewlett

United Church Nursery School

SPORTS CAMP:

Hofstra University

Sportime Lynbrook

The Sports Arena

PEOPLE & PLACES

LOCAL TOURIST ATTRACTION:

Jones Beach State Park

Montauk Point Lighthouse

Nunley’s Carousel

MUSEUM:

Cradle of Aviation Museum

Long Island Children’s Museum

Raynham Hall Museum

PLACE TO HAVE A PARTY:

The Bayview

PLACE TO WORSHIP:

Temple Avodah

Temple B’nai Torah

Temple Beth El

WEDDING VENUE:

The Bayview

Swan Club On The Harbor

Westbury Manor

Gurney’s Montauk Resort & Seawater Spa

The Garden City Hotel

Epic Escape Rooms LI

Kombert Caterers

CHECK BACK NEXT WEEK FOR THE TOP IN SERVICES AND SHOPPING!

7 HERALD — February 2, 2023
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All aboard for Grand Central Madison Limited — and temporary —Long Island Rail Road shuttle service from Jamaica opens

To the casual observer, it was just any other day at Jamaica’s Long Island Rail Road station.

But just after 10 a.m., commuters rushed aboard a shuttle train destined for Manhattan, the familiar busy choreography of squeezing through, wedging past, running in to nab a seat.

Families holding their kids in tow. Couples and solo riders clutching their baggage. All of them packed into train cars, filling the aisle seats within minutes. Other late arrivals stood standing. Nothing seemed out of the ordinary.

But the air — even for a late-morning train ride — was unusually abuzz with chatter. Some kept conversation below a whisper. Others, not so much. But everyone was alive with a quiet knowing that this was no ordinary train ride. Instead, taking place, was a moment in history.

A history that was finally connecting Long island with Manhattan’s East Side.

For the better part of a century, for as long as anyone can remember, LIRR commuters relied on Penn Station to get them into the heart of New York City. So long in fact, it seemed the day for an alternative would never come.

But within the span of 22 minutes, that would all become history.

As the train came to its final stop 150 feet below ground in the bedrock of Midtown Manhattan, the low rattling of the train cars stopped, followed by silence. No one dared to move. Breaking the stillness was the sound of the cheery conductor’s voice coming over the loudspeaker whose five words said it all:

“Welcome to Grand Central Madison”

Applause erupted from the train cars. It was a watershed moment for the MTA as passengers set foot for the very first time on the Metropolitan Transportation Authority’s Manhattan East Side station. A moment that encapsulated six decades of planning, nearly 20 years of construction, and roughly $11.6 billion.

The opening came after a month of delays caused by a faulty ventilation fan. Yet, despite the acknowledged roadblocks, delays and missteps along the way, Grand Central Madison is finally here.

“Grand Central will dramatically change the transportation of the region,” said Janno Lieber, the MTA’s chair and chief executive. “It’s going to benefit Long Islanders with shorter commutes, 40 percent more service, and help Long Island business recruit people from the city with reverse commuting.”

And for Niurka Maldonado of Queens —riding with daughters Nora and Paulina — the prospect of having faster access to Manhattan’s East Side is nothing short of exciting.

“We have several friends that work in that area, and I love some of the restaurants in there,” she said. “So, we’re going to definitely be doing more trips to Grand Central and everything around there.”

Grand Central Madison direct LIRR schedule

For roughly three weeks, shuttle service trains between Jamaica and Grand Central Madison are running every 30 minutes during off-peak hours and on weekends, and once per hour during peak times.

Service runs between 6:15 a.m. and 8 p.m. on weekdays, and between 7 a.m. and 11 p.m. on weekends.

Long Island Rail Road riders looking to Grand Central Madison can use their Penn Station tickets, which are the same price.

It will likely be a month before full service comes online, replacing the simple commuter trains. For now, riders looking for a fast way between Jamaica and Manhattan’s East Side can find trains every 30 minutes during off-peak hours, and every 60 during peak times.

“I just want to see if it saves me time going to my office on the East Side,” said Francesco Giovannetti of Glen Head. “I’m hoping to save about 20 to 30 minutes being two blocks away from Grand Central. I want to get acclimated to the station.”

Then there was Ruthanne Terrero of Malverne, sitting placidly with her tote bag in hand, taking in the significance of the moment of new train service to Manhattan.

“It’s just really glorious to see that we have something really beautiful,” Terrero said. “I think a lot of people work on the East Side, and I think it’s also really important that people see that New York is progressing.”

And more progress is still to come. Whether this project was worth its price tag, worth the commuting disruption, and worth the extended wait will be up to the riders themselves. Some have already taken to social media to point out certain mishaps like escalators shutting down midway, and some finding trouble making their way into the LIRR concourse at Grand Central.

It is no doubt looking to be a work in progress.

But Mitchell Schwartz and brother Steven — two young MTA train enthusiasts from Roslyn — wouldn’t have wanted this once-in-a-lifetime moment any other way.

Phyllis Levine, pounced on the chance to hop on the shuttle train to Grand Central if it meant saving time getting to her pharmacology appointment.

“I’m not a subway person, and I gen-

erally like to drive everywhere,” the Queens resident said. “But the easiest way to get to Manhattan from Queens is the express bus or the Long Island Rail Road. So, I figured I should try the ride to Grand Central. See how it goes.”

“Just try wrapping your head around the fact that we are the first of millions to ride a train toward something that has been proposed for over half a century,” Mitchell said. “It’s just an amazing occasion.”

Additional reporting by Andre Silva.

February 2, 2023 — HERALD 8
Juan Lasso/Herald photos COMMUTERS, ENVELOPED UNDER a glass ceiling, take the roughly 3,000-foot escalator between the Long Island Rail Road concourse and the mezzanine at Grand Central Madison station on opening day of service that will eventually create a direct link between Manhattan’s East Side and Long Island. COMMUTERS FROM JAMAICA station boarded the first passenger Long Island Rail Road train to Grand Central Madison inaugurating the Metropolitan Transportation Authority’s long-awaited East Side access that will soon provide LIRR service out of Grand Central Terminal.

Fighting drug use with focus on mental health

Development Award.

Dealt a bad hand

Wollweber met Sara Dowler, one of the founding members of the coalition — whose acronym stands for Substance Abuse Free Environment — at Oceanside High School. Dowler was Wollweber’s teacher in a class called Redefining Mental Health. She was there for Nick again when he lost his older brother, Joseph, to a drug overdose in 2019. At 14, Wollweber was a freshman at the school.

“I was given a bad hand,” Wollweber said. “And the only way I know how to deal with that is to prevent other people from going down that road that my brother did.”

Now he tells Oceanside high teens his brother’s story, as well as that of his own mental health struggles, challenging the stigma that men can’t be vulnerable and share their feelings, while stressing the importance of having a support system. Wollweber started the safe coalition’s Creating Connections events, which bring teachers and students together to create a better support system in the school.

“I know my brother would want me to just do the best with what I was given, and no matter how much I would rather have him be here, that’s not the reality,” he said. “And the reality is that other people are struggling like he was — silently —

and there needs to be a solution. In my brother’s situation, he didn’t have that support system, and he kept his struggle silent.”

When Wollweber visits the school, he stresses that mental health challenges do not discriminate. Gender, age, race, economic status — “It doesn’t matter,” he said. But the response to it does. Steering clear of unhealthy coping mechanism, such as using drugs and alcohol, can “lead to more dangerous things,” he added. And people — more specifically, boys and men — shouldn’t feel ashamed to ask for help when they are dealing with mental stress or abuse.

“The people that abuse drugs aren’t bad people,” Wollweber said. “They’re just struggling, and they’re looking for that escape.”

He is now pursuing a career in law enforcement while also working with law in the coalition. He is told by police official that there are an average of 24 overdoses per year in Oceanside — two per month. “I want to get that down to zero,” he said.

As for the award, Wollweber said, “I look at it as not an award for myself — I look at it as an award for the work that needs to be done.”

Rethinking ’Rat Park’

Rinaldi, a lifelong Oceanside resident, said he always watched the good work the

coalition was doing “from afar.” But after seeing the immense positive impact the organization has made on the community in eight years, he decided to join a year ago. He brings decades of community psychology experience, including 10 years as the assistant director of community programming at the Hofstra Counseling Center.

Rinaldi started off small, chipping in at meetings and spit-balling new ideas that could be fun and helpful to the community, like the mental health check-in booths that have been implemented at the high school. Along the way, he found collaboration, partnership and “honestly, some friendship out of it,” he said. Which Rinaldi appreciates, considering what he knows about the “Rat Park” experiment undertaken by psychologist Bruce Alexander at the Simon Fraser University in Canada in the late 1970s.

“There was a rat in a little cage all by himself, running on his little treadmill,” Rinaldi explained. “And they ended up putting drugs into his water bottle, and of course the rat became addicted to drugs. And what (Bruce) Alexander very, very cleverly figured out was, well, of course the rat’s addicted to drugs; it has nothing going on. Look at the environment. Look at how sad of an existence it has, running on the treadmill all day by itself.”

Rinaldi, like everyone else, has an inner need to connect to another human

being, he said, even if just on the most basic level of acknowledging another’s existence. Which is a first for some, he added, drawing on his experience as a practicing psychologist. “Any human person has the opportunity to be present, and hold space, and listen to the other person,” he said.

So he’s using his opportunity in the coalition to “be impactful in our own communities to build a better world, a better park, for the kids, for our neighbors, for ourselves,” he said. “The coalition isn’t just about the prevention of drug and alcohol abuse and other things like that. But also creating bonds of connectivity. Connection with other people, connection with nature, connection with the arts, all things that are primary human experiences.”

For Rinaldi, the award is a win for the whole team and the friends he has made along the way. “We all share this award, because it wouldn’t be possible without everybody’s contributions,” he said.

Dowler congratulated both award winners. “Everybody loves him,” she said of Wollweber, “He’s young, he’s a doer and he just has that passion to really want to make positive changes, which you don’t usually see in younger people.”

Rinaldi, Dowler added, “really has brought a lot of fresh new ideas to the coalition, and he’s just a great asset, and we’re so happy (about) that.”

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spotlight athlete

Oceanside ready for stretch run

Uncertainty surrounded the Oceanside girls’ basketball team this season after eight seniors – including four starters –graduated last spring. But instead, thanks to the consistent play of their top scorer and a tenacious defense, the Sailors are thinking playoffs.

BeNJaMiN VelasQUeZ

MacArthur Senior Wrestling

a CoUNtY seMiFiNalist last winter and eventual third-place finisher in the 189-pound weight class, Velasquez is looking to cap his high school career with a Nassau wrestling crown. Heading into this Saturday’s county qualifier tournament at Bellmore-JFK, he is ranked No. 1 in the county at 215 pounds. After winning 21 of 30 matches last winter, his record this season stands at 36-3.

gaMes to WatCh

thursday, Feb. 2

Girls Basketball: Carey at Roosevelt 5 p.m.

Girls Basketball: Mineola at Wantagh 5 p.m.

Girls Basketball: Syosset at Freeport 7 p.m.

Girls Basketball: West Hemp at East Rockaway 7 p.m.

Friday, Feb. 3

Boys Basketball: South Side at Kennedy 4:30 p.m.

Boys Basketball: G.N. South at Calhoun 5 p.m.

Boys Basketball: V.S. Central at East Meadow 5 p.m.

Boys Basketball: East Rockaway at West Hemp 5 p.m.

Girls Basketball: Port Washington at Oceanside 5 p.m.

Girls Basketball: MacArthur at Long Beach 5 p.m.

Boys Basketball: Locust Valley at Seaford 7 p.m.

Girls Basketball: North Shore at Clarke 7 p.m.

Girls Basketball: Jericho at Mepham 7 p.m.

Boys Basketball: Westbury at Baldwin 7 p.m.

saturday, Feb. 4

Wrestling: Nassau County Division 1 Qualifying Tournaments hosted by Long Beach, Hewlett, Bellmore-JFK, Plainedge and Uniondale 9:30 a.m.

Girls Basketball: Lynbrook at Mineola 12 p.m.

Girls Basketball: Kennedy at South Side 12 p.m.

Boys Basketball: Clarke at North Shore 12 p.m.

Boys Basketball: Long Beach at MacArthur 12 p.m.

Oceanside has positioned itself well to snap a four-year playoff drought as it enters the home stretch of the regular season thanks to a 5-4 record in Conference AA-2 play – good for fifth place – and an 8-7 mark overall. The top four teams in the conference qualify for the postseason as well as any team that has at least a .500 record against divisional opponents.

“We’re definitely performing better than expected with the plethora of the inexperienced kids that we have,” Oceanside head coach Jared Stoler said. “We’re winning the game we should be winning. We’re just trying to find that extra oomph to get over the hump and win some of those games that are close.”

But to make it, the Sailors will have to navigate their way through the top four teams in the division among the five games that remain, including Baldwin (111), Plainview (12-3), East Meadow (12-3) and Port Washington (7-7). They are 0-4 against those schools this season, losing by an average of over 21 points.

“It’s not going to be easy,” Stoler said. “But I know for sure we’re going to be prepared and play our absolute hearts out.”

The other game during that stretch is against Herricks (3-11), which the Sailors beat 50-39 on Jan. 11.

This Oceanside team hasn’t scored many points this season (38.5 average) but hasn’t yielded much either (37.5). The defense held Westbury scoreless the entire second half of a 52-6 rout on Dec. 14, didn’t allow a point in the first quarter to Long Beach during that win eight days later, and blanked Island Trees in the final eight minutes of a 27-21 triumph on Dec. 29.

Offensively, junior guard Brianna Amenta – the only returning starter from last year – is leading the team with a 15.7 scoring average and has reached double

digits in 13 of the first 15 games. Among them was a 22-point effort against Port Washington on Jan. 6 and three 21-point outings.

“She’s a very good scorer, but for us, she’s our point guard,” Stoler said. “She’s the one that facilitates and scores, so she’s doing a good job maturing into that role.”

Stoler is hoping a secondary scorer can emerge among Samantha Farsky (6.5) and Emma Pagano (5.8), who each had a double-digit point game this season along with

fellow junior Maeve Barrins. Another junior, Grace DiDominica, led Oceanside with 16 points in a 42-38 win over Seaford on Dec. 12, but she is known more for her defensive prowess.

“We’re looking for that No. 2 girl that we can consistently rely on,” Stoler said.

Stoler has also been pleased with senior Ariel Landa, who makes up for her lack of height with heart and a high defensive IQ and “field general” Barrins, who has played “exceptional” low-post defense.

Bringing local sports home every week Herald sports
February 2, 2023 — OCEANSIDE/ISLAND PARK HERALD 10 Lay-up take you down? We’ve Got Specialists For That ® 516.536.2800 | orlincohen.com OC1283_RunningMan_Herald_Strip_10.25x2.5_Basketball.indd 1 12/5/22 9:44 AM 1198674
Eric Dunetz/Herald JUNioR BRiaNNa aMeNta, the lone returning starter, is averaging better than 15 points per game for the playoff-hopeful Sailors.

Sweet Dreams are Made of Cream at Dolce Bella

Dolce Bella Luxury Italian Ices & Cannoleria has become the (cannoli) cream of the crop, with unique treats that not only look Instagramready but taste divine too, has found its home in Roosevelt Field Mall.

Brandyn Williams, owner of Dolce Bella, has become the Willy Wonka of the classic cannoli, turning creams only dreamed of into a reality.

After nine years of school earning his Masters of Public Administration (MPA) degree and three years in the corporate world, Williams had a calling beckoning him to venture into the unknown. He left his career to pursue something new and in only a handful of years turned an idea into a cannoli craze, but it didn’t start out that way.

His first mission was a deli called Cherry Valley in Long Beach which opened during the pandemic and closed its doors after a year, “it was an epic fail,” Williams said.

Having left his career behind, there was room for worry and potential regret for uprooting his life for a creative endeavor, but not for Williams — who takes each failure as motivational fuel.

“Every door that closed on me, I came back and bought the building,” he said,

“One taste is all it takes,” Big Red said as he handed a sample after sample of some of the freshest and tastiest unique creams I’ve had the pleasure of consuming which included flavors like rainbow cookie, reese pieces, pistachio, M&M, dulce de leche and so much more! Williams deconstructs and reconstructs the cream to make each level new, exciting and exactly what he was looking for.

“One night after going out, I had a craving for a reese’s cannoli cream,” Williams said. “But I didn’t want just pieces of candy in regular cannoli cream, that’s not a true reese's cream. So I reinvented it.”

and he absolutely followed through.

After the deli train reached its last station, Williams started delivering pastries in a van when the never-beforedone idea of an Italian ice cart came to fruition. Williams worked diligently, creating a stunning cart and giving people an experience they’ve never had before by bringing a good attitude, tasty treats and sometimes making it a boozy adventure for the adults.

“There isn’t an Italian ice cart, let alone one that feels lux and offers an overall experience,” he explained. “It started with one cart, now I have 13 carts and this prime location outside the JCPenny first floor entrance of the mall is a dream.”

He also grew from a one-man show to a staff of 30 people the “old fashioned” way, by word of mouth (or keyboard), including Big Red, who mans the kiosk in the mall and is their very own cannoli cream connoisseur and taste expert.

Williams finds joy in seeing his brand bring smiles to faces, from customers to his very own staff. Big Red even gets recognized by customers from his TikTok videos, where he dives into new creations and Dolce Bella classics.

“I love looking at the expression on someone’s face as they take their first bite,” Williams said. “Their eyes say it all, watching them light up solidifies that all the work I put into this company is worth it. It’s not just about looking unique, it’s about tasting just as good and having fun in the process.”

He doesn’t limit himself to what he can or cannot do when it comes to serving, flavors or anything else that comes to mind. Their latest invention, the Dolce Boom, is an ice served with an edible smoke-filled bubble that makes for a quirky surprise. And like everything that Williams does, he goes above and beyond, striving not only to be the best but the greatest in the industry. “Every ingredient, down to the milk, comes from Italy and is made

onsite at our warehouse by our very own gelato-professional,” Williams said.

He takes pride in every aspect of his business, making it an entire experience from taste to presentation to grabbing a snap in front of their aesthetic wall, complete with a neon sign. That’s why you’ll also find cute little pink trash bins to throw away your sample spoons, but these small cans are backed by a huge message.

Cans 4 Cancer is a non profit organization where each can, bottle and donation supports and unites young women with breast cancer, and is one of the ways he gives back. Additionally Williams gives free ices and gelato to children in the hospital and strives to choose one charity a month to donate to.

“Part of being successful is giving back,” said Williams. “And after being blessed with the growth of my company, there is no better way to say thanks.”

Dolce Bella is available to cater parties, corporate events, making their mark at the Hamptons Classic and Herald Premier Business Women of Long Island Awards Gala last year. You can also place an order ahead, book the experience and bring it right to your event or simply visit the kiosk to satisfy those sweet cravings.

“The goal is to be in malls all over and spread the word,” the owner said. “I really love what I do, I have fun with it and I would love to share it with the world.”

Visit www.dolcebellany.com or @dolcebella_ny to see what they'll think up next. Or better yet, take a trip to Roosevelt Field and taste the craze.

HOLY CANNOLI! DOLCE Bella has the classics (below), like chocolate chip, but crank it up a notch to flavors like nutella, pistachio, M&M and more! Snazz it up with some toppings or mix and match flavors, there is no cap to creativity.

11 OCEANSIDE/ISLAND PARK HERALD — February 2, 2023
OWNERS BIG RED and Brandyn Williams striking a pose with one of their colorful creations at their Roosevelt Field Mall location. Photos by Alexa Anderwkavich DOLCE BELLA LUXURY Italian ices are open year-round so you can get a chill treat whenever the cravings strike. Order a Dolce Boom for a blast.
“Every door that closed on me, I came back and bought the building”
PARTNER SPONSOR 1203976
- Brandyn Williams

NCC union rallies after health care costs rise

Demanding fair contracts with affordable health care costs, dozens of Nassau Community College faculty members rallied outside of the county legislature last week.

They were part of a broader protest from the Nassau Community College Federation of Teachers, an educators union representing NCC’s full-time faculty, speaking out against higher health care insurance premium costs. They gathered on the steps of the county legislature carrying signs like “We’d rather be teaching right now,” demanding better wages and fair contracts, targeting both the Nassau Community College Board of Trustees and the county itself.

They weren’t out on the steps long before some of the union members were ushered inside the Mineola building with a chance to state their case with county legislators.

The educators union and trustees board have been negotiating full-time faculty contracts since last July, hoping to work out a deal before their contracts expired in August. The union has rallied multiple times since then, expressing frustration with the negotiation process.

As recently as Dec. 13, Siminioff and the union asked the trustees to include salary increases to keep up with rising inflation, as well as include paid sabbaticals. But then, last week, health insurance premium costs jumped for full-time faculty at NCC.

The increase came about thanks to the trustees enacting an old clause in their contracts — written decades ago — allow-

ing the board to charge faculty members working under an expired contract with increased health insurance premiums. The insurance increases, Siminioff said, could cost faculty members between $2,500 and $5,000 — effectively acting like a pay cut.

“So, we’re not getting we’re not getting a wage increase. Our promotions have all been frozen. We’re not getting our sabbaticals. We’re not getting anything. But they’re imposing this on us,” Siminioff said. “I think this provision has been there for 30 years and they have never invoked it. They want to punish the faculty and force us through economic strongarming.”

John Gross, an Ingerman Smith attorney representing Nassau Community College, said the New York State Health Insurance Plan — which provides insurance to all college employees — raised premiums on Jan. 1 by 15 percent for family coverage. That’s about $5,000 each year. Individual coverage rose more than 12 percent, which could cost upward of $4,000 over the next 12 months.

A provision in NCC’s full-time faculty labor contract states if the cost of health insurance premiums increases after a contract expires, Gross said, it’s up to the individual employees to shoulder those costs through payroll deductions.

“The union knew it was in the labor contract because one of the proposals in our current negotiations is to remove the clause,” Gross said. “The board didn’t wake up one day and said, ‘You know what? We’re going to impose these increases on the union.’”

Siminioff said many faculty members

feel the college has strained them to their limits, and has not properly supported them financially. Aside from the imposed health insurance premiums, NCC’s faculty has experienced an average wage increase just over 1 percent in the past decade.

“The starting salary for an instructional faculty member is approximately $60,800, and the starting salary for a noninstructional faculty member is $55,900,” Siminioff said. “According to the MIT wage calculator, a middle-class family of three needs about $96,000 to be middle class in Nassau County.”

Faculty members are teaching more students in larger classes over the past few years, Siminioff said. When she first

started teaching at NCC some 25 years ago, she taught an average of 110 students each semester. Now, professors are being asked to educate an average of 160 students each semester — which Siminioff feels is unfair.

Aside from low starting wages, it typically takes 15 to 18 years for someone on the faculty to start earning $100,000, Siminioff said. Anyone hired now would earn $55,000, taking 15 years to climb to $100,000.

“By the time you get 15 years of employment, it’s still not enough to live middle class in Nassau County,” Siminioff said. “So, they’re condemning college faculty to never being middle class. That’s the bottom line.”

February 2, 2023 — OCEANSIDE/ISLAND PARK HERALD 12
Tim Baker/Herald photos MEMBERS OF THE Nassau Community College Federation of Teachers, an educators union supporting the school’s full-time faculty, gathered at the Nassau County Legislature to demand fair contracts after learning their health care insurance premiums were going up. FAREN SIMINIOFF, PRESIDENT of the Nassau Community College Federation of Teachers union, gathered protesters outside the Nassau County Legislature, demanding better wages and fair contracts from the Nassau Community College board and the county.
T hey want to punish the faculty and force us through economic strong-arming.
FAREN SIMINIOFF president, Nassau
Community College Federation of
Teachers

STEPPING OUT

Score big on Super Sunday on Get your

It’s the biggest sports day of the year. Classic commercials, historic plays and friends are all quintessential elements of the perfect game-day get-together. Whether your gang includes football fanatics or just a few fans, the big game — on Feb. 12 — is a great excuse for casual winter entertaining.

And while there may be a game on the big screen, a lot of the action takes place around the table — keeping everyone well-fed is a sport in itself!

• 1/4 tsp. onion powder

• 1 tsp. smoked paprika

• 1 cup hummus

Whisk first seven ingredients together (vinegar through paprika). Add hummus and combine thoroughly. Be creative with your dipping options. Potato and tortilla chips go hand-in-hand with tailgating festivities, but beyond these standards is a whole world of other dipping options. For a Mediterranean touch, go with flatbread, pita bread or pita chips. Or opt for more texture with multi-grain crackers that include raw flax, chia or sesame seeds. Or go for double the Buffalo wing flavor by dipping your wing, instead of the traditional blue cheese.

Cajun Buffalo Chicken Wings

Here’s a zesty take on the football-watching favorite.

• 2-1/2 pounds chicken wing pieces

• 1/2 cup any flavor Frank’s Red Hot Buffalo Wings Sauce

• 1/3 cup ketchup

• 2 tsp. Cajun seasoned spice blend

Bake wings in foil-lined pan at 500° F on lowest oven rack for 20 to 25 minutes until crispy, turning once.

Mix buffalo wings sauce, ketchup and spice blend. Toss wings in sauce to coat.

Tip: You may substitute 1/2 cup red hot sauce mixed with 1/3 cup melted butter for the Wings Sauce.

Alternate cooking directions: Deep-fry at 375° F for 10 minutes, or broil 6 inches from heat 15 to 20 minutes turning once.

Darlene Love

Darlene Love is always a welcome stage presence. For more than 50 years, she’s been making rock and roll’s world go ‘round. Since the early ‘60s, as part of Phil Spector’s Wall of Sound hit factory, this songstress has done it all — from movies like the ‘Lethal Weapon’ series to Broadway hits like ‘Hairspray’ and ‘Grease.’ She even starred as herself in ‘Leader of the Pack,’ credited as Broadway’s first ‘jukebox musical.’ Love’s career and legacy reached new heights, as a result of being featured in 2013’s acclaimed documentary ‘20 Feet from Stardom,’ when she became the best known ‘unknown”’ in rock history. She continues to captivate audiences with her warm, gracious persona and dynamic performances. Her timeless, soaring voice remains as powerful as ever. Rolling Stone magazine has proclaimed Love to be ‘one of the greatest singers of all time,’ and that certainly rings true, but perhaps Paul Shaffer says it even more concisely: ‘Darlene Love is rock and roll!”

Friday, Feb. 10, 8 p.m. $88, $78, $68. Jeanne Rimsky Theater at Landmark on Main Street, 232 Main St., Port Washington. (516) 767-6444 or LandmarkOnMainStreet.org.

Hummus Buffalo Wing Dip

A warm batch of Buffalo wings pairs well with this smoky and spicy dip.

• 1 tsp. red wine vinegar

• 1 tsp. olive oil

• 1 tbsp. tomato paste

• 1 tsp. Dijon mustard

• 1/4 tsp. garlic powder

Touchdown Italian Sausage Chili

• 1 package (19.76 ounces) Italian sausage links

• 1 cup onion, chopped

• 3 celery ribs, cut into 1/2-inch pieces

• 1 large sweet red pepper, cut into 1-inch pieces

• 1 tbsp. garlic, minced

• 3 tbsp. olive oil

• 1 large yellow pepper, cut into 1-inch pieces

• 1 large green pepper, cut into 1-inch pieces

• 3 cans (14-1/2 ounces each) Italian recipe stewed tomatoes

• 1 can (16 ounces) dark red kidney beans, rinsed and drained

• 1 can (15 ounces) butter beans, rinsed and drained

• 1 can (6 ounces) tomato paste

• 3/4 cup black olives, sliced

• 1/4 cup cream sherry (optional)

• 1 tbsp. fresh basil, chopped

• 1 1/2 tsp. baking cocoa

• 1/2 to 1 tsp. pepper

Cook sausage according to package directions; cut into half moon slices and set aside.

In soup kettle, saute onion, celery, sweet pepper and garlic in oil until tender. Add sausage and remaining ingredients; bring to boil. Reduce heat; cover and simmer for 20 minutes or until flavors are blended.

Sprinkle chili with grated asiago, romano, parmesan cheese — or any cheese of your choice — before serving. Makes 12 servings.

Lviv National Philharmonic

The National Philharmonic Orchestra of Ukraine was established in Lviv in1902, a city known as one of the great cultural centers of eastern Europe, The orchestra has evolved over the years to become one of that nation’s largest and most internationally known ensembles, now under the baton of principal guest conductor Theodore Kuchar. It reminds us of how music can bridge cultures and bring people together. Their 2023 American tour is a testament to the power of music to overcome adversity. Their program for this powerful concert includes: Ukrainian composer Yevhen Stankovych’s Chamber Symphony No. 3 for Flute and String Orchestra; Grieg’s Piano Concerto in A minor, Op. 16; and Beethoven’s Symphony No. 7 in A major, Op. 92. Pianist Oksana Rapita is the featured soloist.

Saturday, Feb. 16, 8 p.m.; with 6:45 p.m. Arts Insider preperformance preview. $79, $59, $44. Tilles Center for the Performing Arts, LIU Post campus, 720 Northern Blvd., Brookville. (516) 299-3100 or TillesCenter. org..

13 OCEANSIDE/ISLAND PARK HERALD — February 2, 2023

THE SCENE

Feb. 23

Art talk

Grab your lunch and join Nassau County Museum of Art Docent Riva Ettus for her popular “Brown Bag Lecture” live, via Zoom, Thursday, Feb. 23, 1 p.m. She’ll discuss the current exhibition, “The Big Picture: Photography Now.” 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. Also Feb. Nassau County Museum of Art, 1 Museum Dr., Roslyn Harbor. (516) 484-9337 or NassauMuseum.org.

Feb. 8

Become a warrior for the community

Join the Oceanside Community Warriors for weekly community cleanups around the hamlet every Sunday. Contact Oceansidewarriorsny@gmail.com for information on the location of their next cleanup.

Island Park Village Board meeting

The Village of Island Park Board meets, Thursday, Feb. 16, 7 p.m., at Village Hall 127 Long Beach Road.

Polar Bear Splash

Zoë Keating

Cellist and composer Zoë Keating visits the Landmark stage, Friday, Feb. 17, 8 p.m. Considered a “one woman orchestra” she uses a cello and a foot-controlled laptop to loop layer upon layer of cello, creating intricate, haunting, and compelling music; Keating has spent the last 20 years exploring the landscape of sounds a string instrument can make. She coaxes sounds out of the very edges of her cello, adeptly layering them into “swoon inducing” (San Francisco Weekly) music that is unclassifiable yet “a distinctive mix of old and new” (National Public Radio). She is known for her use of technology — which she uses to record and sample her cello onstage and in the studio – and for her DIY approach — composing, recording and producing her works on her own terms, without the help of a record label. $41, $35, $27. Jeanne Rimsky Theater at Landmark on Main Street, 232 Main St., Port Washington. (516) 767-6444 or LandmarkOnMainStreet.org.

Oceanside Board of Education meeting

The Oceanside Board of Education meets, Wednesday, Feb. 8, 7 7:30 p.m., in the School No. 6 auditorium, 25 Castleton Court.

The Long Beach Polar Bears will make their annual splash into the ocean, Sunday, Feb. 12, on Laurelton Blvd., starting at 1:30 pm. For more information, visit LongBeachNY.gov.

Island Park Civic Association meeting

The Island Park Civic Association meets, Monday, Feb. 13, 7 p.m., at Island Park Public Library, 176 Long Beach Rd. Topic: Equinor Wind Farm.

Your Neighborhood
Feb. 17 February 2, 2023 — OCEANSIDE/ISLAND PARK HERALD 14 4th ANNUAL THE PREMIER AWARDS GALA WEDNESDAY ◆ MARCH 22 ◆ 6:00 PM The Heritage Club at Bethpage Celebrating high-level female business leaders making an impact on Long Island. NOMINATIONS NOW OPEN Visit richnerlive.com/nominate RICHNER are needed to see this picture. Produced by: Connect. Collaborate. Celebrate! 1203789

Platanos Y Collard Greens

See the romantic comedy about what happens when an African American and a Latina college student fall in love, presented by Nassau Community College Theater and Dance Department and the Africana Studies Department, Thursday through Saturday, Feb. 7-11, 7:30 p.m.; Sunday, Feb. 12, 2 p.m. Also Feb. 16-19, with talkback session with playwright David Lamb, immediately following final performance. Threaded by the culture of hip-hop, the lovers defend their relationship, as friends and family learn that this “food fight” calls for fusion instead of feud. Nassau Community College’s Mainstage Theatre, Garden City. Tickets $10; NCC students free with valid ID; $8 veterans, alumni, seniors 60+, students and NCC employees. For tickets/information, visit NCC. edu or call (516) 572-7676.

Donations requested for Mount Sinai South Nassau patients

Mount Sinai South Nassau is collecting new universal chargers, charging cubes and colored pencils for hospital patients, to help them occupy their time, through March 5. Drop off items at the Oceanside Library, through a Kiwanis School Club, or purchase through the hospital’s Amazon wishlist, available online.

Learn lifesaving

OnSight medical trauma Life

Saver course is offered at Rescue Company No. 1 of Oceanside, Saturday, Feb. 11, 9 a.m.-5:30 p.m on. The session, at 2814 Tilrose Ave., includes bleeding control, personal safety, basic first aid, and more. $175; $75 deposit upon registration, $100 in cash day of the class. For more info contact info@oftllc.us. Register at AllEvents.in/oceanside-ny.

Having an event?

In perfect harmony

The SingStrong A Cappella Festival returns to the New York area, hosted by Adelphi University, Friday through Sunday, Feb. 3-5. Professional a cappella groups perform along with collegiate and high school ensembles. A variety of musical genres are represented, including re-imaginings of barbershop, pop, R&B, jazz, and more. Adelphi University Performing Arts Center, 1 South Ave., Garden City. (516) 8774000 or Adelphi.edu/pac.

Valentine’s Day music performance

Local musicians Barry Feterman and Rich DiLallo return to the Island Park Library, Saturday, Feb. 11, 2-3 p.m., to perform songs of love from decades past, 176 Long Beach Road. For information, visit IslandParkLibrary.org.

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.

RichnerLIVE is “Fealing” Good

(From left to right) Jodi Turk, event, marketing and brand strategist, and Amy Amato, executive director of corporate relations and events, visited the Barasch & McGarry office to deliver a check to John Feal, founder and president of the FealGood Foundation, and Sara Director, partner at Barasch & McGarry who handles 9/11 Victim Compensation Fund (VCF) claims and a Top Lawyer Honoree. RichnerLIVE donated a portion of ticket proceeds from the Herald Top Lawyers of Long Island Awards Gala to the foundation. The FealGood Foundation protects and assists all emergency personnel injured on the job or in their personal lives through offering financial aid, basic home utilities, medicine and more. On Sept. 12, 2001, Feal was called to assist in the cleanup of ground zero when his foot was crushed and forced to be amputated. After dealing with the hurdles that came with the accident, he decided that no one should struggle after helping with ground zero. Visit www.FealGoodFoundation.com for more information on the organization and how you can help.

On exhibit

Photography’s ascent in the art world is an international phenomenon. Nassau County Museum of Art’s star-studded exhibition spans the historical roots of the medium. View works by Ansel Adams and his generation and the thrilling, large-format

color works of such contemporary masters as Cindy Sherman, Thomas Struth, James Casebere and Gregory Crewdson, among others. From the documentary to the painterly, images bear witness to the times. On view through March 5. Nassau County Museum of Art, 1 Museum Drive, Roslyn Harbor. (516) 484-9337 or NassauMuseum.org.

Pat McGann

Pat McGann, quickly rising as one of the sharpest stand-ups on the comedy scene, appears at The Paramount, Saturday, Feb. 11, 8 p.m. A relative latecomer to comedy, he began doing stand-up at age 31 after realizing he was not very good at selling packaging. He hustled his way to become the house emcee at Zanies Chicago, where he distinguished himself as especially adept at working the crowd. A husband and father of three young children, his appeal stems from his quick wit and relatable take on family life and marriage. In 2017, McGann began touring as the opening act for Sebastian Maniscalco, moving with him from clubs to theater, to

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D’Esposito gets to work on Capitol Hill

It’s certainly been an interesting process getting acclimated to Washington, and his new role as a congressman. But U.S. Rep. Anthony D’Esposito is happy to finally get to settle down and tackle his new role on Capitol Hill.

From police officer to detective in the New York Police Department. An 18-year-old volunteer firefighter to fire chief. And now Hempstead town councilman to congressman, the 40-year-old Island Park native describes looking back at his journey as a surreal experience.

Orientation for incoming congressional members like D’Esposito began the Sunday after Election Day — a point where some candidates were still waiting for their races to be called. Still, freshmen members of the House undergo a two-week icebreaker period where they get to know one another and learn how everything we see on C-SPAN operates.

“In politics in general — but specifically in Washington — you look at where people sit on the (House) floor, and it’s literally divided by an aisle,” D’Esposito said. “When we went to orientation, you walked into the hotel or you walked into different events, everyone just had a nametag on.”

It said who they were and where they were from, but there was no “D” or “R” labelling them as Democrats or Republicans.

“I think it gave (us) the opportunity to really meet people with an open mind,” he said.

D’Esposito is now almost a month into office, serving on three House committees: Homeland Security, Transportation and Infrastructure and House Administration.

When it comes to homeland security, the congressman believes the biggest issue the country faces is taking

WITH THE HELP of his 3-year-old niece Sailor, U.S. Rep. Anthony D’Esposito takes the oath of office from former U.S. Sen. Alfonse D’Amato. The congressman finds himself on three House committees, including one for homeland security that requires him to get top-secret clearance.

place at the U.S.-Mexico border. There have been a large number of migrants coming to the United States seeking asylum, or at least a better life. While D’Esposito believes everyone should have the opportunity to come to America, it still must be “done correctly.”

That means more funding for border patrol agents and the resources they need to keep the country’s borders safe.

Getting onto the Homeland Security Community meant earning a top-secret security clearance. Before leaving the NYPD in his previous life, D’Esposito was in

the process of transferring to the department’s joint terrorist task force.

“In addition to my 20 or so years as a first responder, I think having someone from Long Island and New York on Homeland Security is super important,” D’Esposito said. “We need to carry that mantle of Peter King, who was the chair of Homeland Security following 9/11. And we need to make sure we are able to provide the resources that we need to our local law enforcement agencies — not only here, but throughout the country.”

D’Esposito’s responsibilities with the Committee of House Administration include overseeing management of House operations, federal elections, key congressional offices, and Capitol Complex security — which extends to supervising the U.S. Capitol Police and its management.

The former police officer expressed his excitement in the opportunity to utilize his law enforcement experience when collaborating with officers sworn to protect one of the nation’s three branches of government.

But even with all that work on his plate, D’Esposito still finds himself talking about one of his fellow freshman colleagues from a neighboring congressional district — U.S. Rep. George Santos, and the ongoing reports and investigations into his past and how he raised money for his campaign.

D’Esposito won’t back down on his calls for Santos to resign, and is prepared to provide whatever services constituents in Santos’ district might need, but not comfortable approaching the embattled congressman about.

“People voted for a George Santos that they don’t even know — they voted for the George Santos that George created,” D’Esposito said. “You call, you’re looking for help, regardless of where you live, regardless of where you’re from, what you look like or what party you’re affiliated with — we’re here to help you.”

Tim Baker/Herald
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Courtesy Oceanside school district

PARP StoRybook PARAde 10 Library Media Specialist Mary LaVigna poses with students after a storybook parade to celebrate PARP. PARP is a Parent Teacher Association sponsored celebration of reading.

School No. 9E Celebrates PARP with Storybook Parade

The weather outside was frightful on the day School No. 9E students had a storybook parade to celebrate PARP. But the students didn’t let the rain and gloom spoil their enjoyment of wonderful books and stories.

Led by Library Media Specialist Mary LaVigna, who also dressed for the occasion, students paraded the halls in their

costumes, to the cheers and high fives of fellow students.

Originally known as “Parents as Reading Partners,” and now rebranded as People as Reading Partners, PARP is a Parent Teacher Association sponsored week that is all about the shared love of reading.

— Karina Kovac

ANNOUNCEMENTS

Congratulations to Anne and Frank Saccente on celebrating 50 years of marriage!

Married on Feb. 3, 1973, this week Anne and Frank Saccente are celebrating their 50th anniversary together.

“We want to wish you a happy 50th Anniversary,” said Lenore Saccente, “Here’s to many more year’s happiness. We all love you both very much.”

Anne And FRAnk Saccente are celebrating their 50th anniversary Feb. 3.

Deadline set for non-public school transportation

The Oceanside School District’s Transportation Office has announced that all requests for non-public school registration for transportation for the 2023-24 school year must be postmarked on or before April 1, 2023.

All requests should be addressed to Oceanside UFSD, Transportation Dept.

BREAKING DOWN BOUNDARIES WITH CANCER BREAKTHROUGHS

145 Merle Ave, Oceanside, NY 11572, attn. Rachael Blackman. If you do not receive a registration card in the mail or your child is switching to a non-public school, you must contact the transportation office. For additional information, please call (516) 678-1211 or email: rblackman@ oceansideschools.org

LIJ Medical Center is in the top 10% of hospitals nationally for oncology, according to U.S.News&WorldReport.

Our doctors are raising health by pioneering innovative approaches to cancer from novel chemotherapy techniques to first-in- the-nation robotic mastectomies with minimal scarring. Because when it comes to cancer, there’s no status quo. There’s only “how far can we go?”

Northwell.edu/NoLimits

Courtesy of Lenore Saccente
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Tyler Flach’s attorneys ask for murder charges vacated

Tyler Flach, who was convicted of second-degree murder in November for the knifing death of 16-year-old Khaseen Morris, was absent upon his new counsel’s request to vacate the murder charges in Nassau County Courthouse in Mineola Monday morning.

Flach is expected to be sentenced Feb. 28 after the swift appearance before Acting Supreme Court Justice Howard Sturim.

Khaseen Morris, was fatally stabbed in the chest at the Brower Avenue strip mall parking lot in Oceanside, on Sept. 16, 2019 during an after school brawl. Morris had recently moved to Oceanside and had only attended his new high school for ten days prior to the stabbing.

A jury found Flach guilty of four counts against him – second degree murder, first-degree gang assault, misdemeanor assault and weapons possession resulting in a possible prison sentence of 25 years to life. The jurors believed that this was an intentional homicide.

Jonathan Rosenberg, a new hire to represent Flach during sentencing and appeals after the recent conviction on Nov. 1, stated that the Nassau County prosecutors misled the jury and preferred a retrial.

Rosenberg described the case to have been “poisonous” arguing that the number of times Flach stabbed Morris was not accurately described to the jury by the prosecution.

Additionally, Rosenberg argued in court papers that radio recordings from when Morris was being treated in the ambulance after he was stabbed were not turned over to the defense.

Both the prosecutors and the defense attorneys need ample time to provide arguments on the defense motion that would put aside the conviction.

Sturim gave the district attorney’s office until Feb. 13 to respond and the defense would have until Feb. 21 for any additional arguments. Flach’s mother, Jeanne McGuire, was present in the

courtroom Monday morning with a close-by Rosenberg. Morris’ family did not attend Monday’s court appearance.

Nassau County Police Department Lido Beach reSident Tyler Flach faces 25 years to life in prison after his November conviction.
19 OCEANSIDE/ISLAND PARK HERALD — February 2, 2023 1199613
Christina Daly/Herald KhaSeen MorriS waS fatally stabbed in Oceanside on Sept. 16, 2019.

Public Notices

LEGAL NOTICE

SUPREME COURT OF THE STATE OF NEW YORK

COUNTY OF NASSAU

THE BANK OF NEW YORK

MELLON FKA THE BANK OF NEW YORK AS

TRUSTEE FOR THE CERTIFICATE HOLDERS OF CWMBS, INC. CHL MORTGAGE PASSTHROUGH TRUST 2007-8 MORTGAGE PASS THROUGH CERTIFICATES, SERIES 2007-8, Plaintiff, v. DANA SALGADO, ET AL, Defendant. NOTICE OF SALE IN FORECLOSURE

PLEASE TAKE NOTICE

THAT

In pursuance of a Judgment of Foreclosure and Sale entered in the Office of the County Clerk of Nassau County on November 8, 2019, I, George Esernio, Esq., Esq. the Referee named in said Judgment, will sell in one parcel at public auction on March 8, 2023 at The North Side Steps of the Nassau County Supreme Court, 100 Supreme Court Drive, Mineola, NY 11501, County of Nassau, State of New York, at 2:30 PM the premises described as follows: 338 Virginia Avenue

Oceanside, NY 11572

SBL No: 43-298-98

ALL THAT TRACT OR PARCEL OF LAND situate in the Town of Hempstead, County of Nassau, State of New York.

The premises are sold subject to the provisions of the filed judgment, Index No. 611233/2018 in the amount of $639,701.71 plus interest and costs.

Foreclosure Auctions 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 foreclosure auction.

Richard S. Mullen

Woods Oviatt Gilman LLP

Plaintiff’s Attorney

500 Bausch & Lomb Place Rochester, NY 14604 Tel.: 855-227-5072

137017

LEGAL NOTICE

NOTICE OF SALE

SUPREME COURT:

NASSAU COUNTY.

LOAN FUNDER LLC, SERIES 14024, Pltf. vs. 25 PARMA GROUP CORP., et al, Defts. Index #606809/21. Pursuant to judgment of foreclosure and sale entered Dec. 8, 2022, I will sell at public auction on the north side front steps of the Nassau Supreme Court, 100 Supreme Court Drive, Mineola, NY on March 7, 2023 at 2:00 p.m., prem. k/a 25 Parma Road, Island Park, NY a/k/a Section 43, Block 48, Lots 108 & 210. Approx. amt. of judgment is $234,754.33 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 auction.

LESLIE FEIFER, Referee. DEUTSCH & SCHNEIDER LLP, Attys. for Pltf., 79-37 Myrtle Avenue, Glendale, NY. File No. LF- 271#100041

137013

LEGAL NOTICE

FAMILY COURT OF NEW YORK COUNTY OF NASSAU

Honorable Robin M. Kent

In the Matter of Nassau County Department of Social Services o/b/o of File No.: 626532

Docket No.: NN-08671-22

Xavianna Ramirez, AKA Ramirez (DOB: 11/09/2006)

Petitioner

A Child Under the Age of Eighteen Years

Alleged to Be Neglected By Crystal Ramirez, mother

SUMMONS Child Neglect Respondent.

NOTICE: IF YOUR CHILD STAYS IN FOSTER CARE FOR 15 OF THE MOST RECENT 22 MONTHS, THE AGENCY MAY BE REQUIRED BY LAW TO FILE A PETITION TO TERMINATE YOUR PARENTAL RIGHTS AND MAY FILE BEFORE THE END OF THE 15-MONTH PERIOD. IF THE PETITION IS GRANTED, YOU MAY LOSE YOUR RIGHTS TO YOUR CHILD AND YOUR CHILD MAY BE ADOPTED WITHOUT YOUR CONSENT.

BY ORDER FO THE FAMILY COURT OF THE STATE OF NEW YORK

To:Crystal Ramire Address Unknown

A petition under Article 10 of the Family Court Act having been filed with this Court, and annexed hereto

YOU AND EACH OF YOU ARE HEREBY SUMMONED to appear before this Court on

Date/Time:March 6, 2023, 9:00AM

Purposes: Preliminary

Proceeding and In Person Appearance

Part:2

Floor/Room:Floor 2/Room 204

Presiding: Hon. Robin M. Kent

Location: Courthouse

1200 Old Country Rd. Westbury, NY 11590 to answer the petition and to be dealt with in accordance Article 10 of the Family court Act. On your failure to appear as herein directed, a warrant may be issued for your arrest.

Dated: January 25, 2023

John Aiken, Chief Clerk

SUCCESSOR TO JPMORGAN CHASE BANK, N.A. SUCCESSOR TO THE CHASE MANHATTAN BANK, SUCCESSOR TO CHEMICAL BANK), AS TRUSTEE FOR IMC HOME EQUITY LOAN TRUST

1996-1, Plaintiff AGAINST JOHN J. OLIVIERO, Defendant(s) Pursuant to a Judgment of Foreclosure and Sale duly entered November 23, 2015, 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 February 16, 2023 at 2:30PM, premises known as 24 HASTINGS ROAD, ISLAND PARK, NY 11558.

All that certain plot piece or parcel of land, with the buildings and improvements erected, situate, lying and being in the Incorporated Village of Island Park, Town of Hempstead, County of Nassau and State of New York, SECTION 43, BLOCK 29, LOTS 130, 131.

Approximate amount of judgment $91,247.38 plus interest and costs.

Premises will be sold subject to provisions of filed Judgment Index #009094/2014. 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. If proper social distancing cannot be maintained or there are other health or safety concerns, then the court appointed referee will cancel the foreclosure auction. Foreclosure

Auctions will be held

“Rain or Shine”. Janine

Lynam, Esq., Referee Gross Polowy, LLC 1775 Wehrle Drive Williamsville, NY 14221 00-301239 74529

136706

LEGAL NOTICE

NOTICE OF SALE SUPREME COURT COUNTY OF NASSAU

Federal National Mortgage Association, Plaintiff AGAINST David C. Conn a/k/a David Conn, Heather S. Conn a/k/a Heather Conn, Defendant(s) Pursuant to a Judgment of Foreclosure and Sale duly entered October 3, 2016, 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 February 27, 2023 at 2:00PM, premises known as 542 Derby Drive South, Oceanside, NY 11572. All that certain plot piece or parcel of land, with the buildings and improvements erected, situate, lying and being at Oceanside, Town of

Hempstead, County of Nassau and State of New York, Section 54, Block 498, Lot 55. Approximate amount of judgment $392,263.67 plus interest and costs. Premises will be sold subject to provisions of filed Judgment Index #015311/2013. 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. If proper social distancing cannot be maintained or there are other health or safety concerns, then the court appointed referee will cancel the foreclosure auction. Foreclosure Auctions will be held “Rain or Shine”. Oscar Prieto, Esq., Referee Gross Polowy, LLC 1775 Wehrle Drive Williamsville, NY 14221 20-002113 74667 136712

LEGAL NOTICE

NOTICE FOR FORMATION of a limited liability company (LLC). The name of the limited liability company is FOXHURST LEGACY LLC. The date of filing of the articles of organization with the Department of State was December 15, 2022. The County in New York in which the office of the company is located is Nassau. The Secretary of State has been designated as agent of the company upon whom process may be served, and the Secretary of State shall mail a copy of any process against the company served upon him or her to The LLC, 61 Foxhurst Road, Oceanside, New York 11572. The business purpose of the company is to engage in any and all business activities permitted under the laws of the State of New York.

136279

LEGAL NOTICE

PUBLIC NOTICE OF NASSAU COUNTY TREASURER’S SALE OF TAX LIENS ON REAL ESTATE Notice is hereby given that commencing on February 21st, 2023, will sell at public on-line auction the tax liens on certain real estate, unless the owner, mortgagee, occupant of or any other party in interest in such real estate shall have paid to the County Treasurer by February 16th, 2023 the total amount of such unpaid taxes or assessments with the interest, penalties and other expenses and charges against the property. Such tax liens will be sold at the lowest rate of interest, not exceeding 10 percent per six-month period, for which any person or persons shall

offer to take the total amount of such unpaid taxes as defined in Section 5-37.0 of the Nassau County Administrative Code.

Effective with the February 2019 lien sale Ordinance No. 175-2015 requires a $175.00 per day registration fee for each person who intends to bid at the tax lien sale. Ordinance No. 175-2015 also requires that upon the issuance of the Lien Certificate there is due from the lien buyer a Tax Certificate Issue Fee of $20.00 per lien purchased. Pursuant to the provisions of the Nassau County Administrative Code at the discretion of the Nassau County Treasurer the auction will be conducted online. Further information concerning the procedures for the auction is available at the website of the Nassau County Treasurer at: https://www.nassaucount yny.gov/526/County-

Treasurer

Should the Treasurer determine that an inperson auction shall be held, same will commence on the 21st day of February 2023 at the Office of The County Treasurer 1 West Street, Mineola or at some other location to be determined by the Treasurer.

A list of all real estate in Nassau County on which tax liens are to be sold is available at the website of the Nassau County Treasurer at: https://www.nassaucount yny.gov/527/Annual-TaxLien-Sale

A list of local properties upon which tax liens are to be sold will be advertised in this publication on or before February 08th, 2023. Nassau County does not discriminate on the basis of disability in admission to or access to, or treatment or employment in, its services, programs, or activities. Upon request, accommodations such as those required by the Americans with Disabilities Act (ADA) will be provided to enable individuals with disabilities to participate in all services, programs, activities and public hearings and events conducted by the Treasurer’s Office. Upon request, information can

be made available in Braille, large print, audiotape or other alternative formats. For additional information, please call (516) 571-2090 ext. 1-3715.

Dated: January 25, 2023

THE NASSAU COUNTY

TREASURER

Mineola, NewYork

TERMS OF SALE

Such tax liens shall be sold subject to any and all superior tax liens of sovereignties and other municipalities and to all claims of record which the County may have thereon and subject to the provisions of the Federal and State Soldiers’ and Sailors’ Civil Relief Acts. However, such tax liens shall have priority over the County’s Differential Interest Lien, representing the excess, if any, of the interest and penalty borne at the maximum rate over the interest and penalty borne at the rate at which the lien is purchased.

The Purchaser acknowledges that the tax lien(s) sold pursuant to these Terms of Sale may be subject to pending bankruptcy proceedings and/or may become subject to such proceedings which may be commenced during the period in which a tax lien is held by a successful bidder or the assignee of same, which may modify a Purchaser’s rights with respect to the lien(s) and the property securing same. Such bankruptcy proceedings shall not affect the validity of the tax lien. In addition to being subject to pending bankruptcy proceedings and/or the Federal and State Soldiers’ and Sailors’ Civil Relief Acts, said purchaser’s right of foreclosure may be affected by the Financial Institutions Reform, Recovery and Enforcement Act(FIRREA),12 U.S.C. ss 1811 et.seq., with regard to real property under Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation(FDIC) receivership.

The County Treasurer reserves the right, without further notice and at any time, to withdraw from sale any of the parcels of land or premises herein listed. The Nassau County

Treasurer reserves the right to intervene in any bankruptcy case/litigation where the property affected by the tax liens sold by the Treasurer is part of the bankruptcy estate. However, it is the sole responsibility of all tax lien purchasers to protect their legal interests in any bankruptcy case affecting their purchased tax lien, including but not limited to the filing of a proof of claim on their behalf, covering their investment in said tax lien. The Nassau County Treasurer and Nassau County and its agencies, assumes no responsibility for any legal representation of any tax lien purchaser in any legal proceeding including but not limited to a bankruptcy case where the purchased tax lien is at risk. The rate of interest and penalty at which any person purchases the tax lien shall be established by his bid. Each purchaser, immediately after the sale thereof, shall pay to the County Treasurer ten per cent of the amount for which the tax liens have been sold and the remaining ninety per cent within thirty days after such sale. If the purchaser at the tax sale shall fail to pay the remaining ninety per cent within ten days after he has been notified by the County Treasurer that the certificates of sale are ready for delivery, then all amounts deposited with the County Treasurer including but not limited to the ten per cent theretofore paid by him shall, without further notice or demand, be irrevocably forfeited by the purchaser and shall be retained by the County Treasurer as liquidated damages and the agreement to purchase shall be of no further effect. Time is of the essence in this sale. This sale is held pursuant to the Nassau County Administrative Code and interested parties are referred to such Code for additional information as to terms of the sale, rights of purchasers, maximum rates of interest and other legal incidents of the sale.

Furthermore, as to the bidding,

1. The bidder(s) agree

that they will not work with any other bidder(s) to increase, maintain or stabilize interest rates or collaborate with any other bidder(s) to gain an unfair competitive advantage in the random number generator in the event of a tie bid(s) on a tax certificate. Bidder(s) further agree not to employ any bidding strategy designed to create an unfair competitive advantage in the tiebreaking process in the upcoming tax sale nor work with any other bidder(s) to engage in any bidding strategy that will result in a rotational award of tax certificates.

2. The tax certificate(s) the Bidder will bid upon, and the interest rate(s) bid, will be arrived at independently and without direct or indirect consultation, communication or agreement with any other bidder and that the tax certificate(s) the Bidder will bid upon, and the interest rate(s) to be bid, have not been disclosed, directly or indirectly, to any other bidder, and will not be disclosed, directly or indirectly, to any other bidder prior to the close of bidding. No attempt has been made or will be made to, directly or indirectly, induce any other bidder to refrain from bidding on any tax certificate, to submit complementary bids, or to submit bids at specific interest rates.

3. The bids to be placed by the Bidder will be made in good faith and not pursuant to any direct or indirect, agreement or discussion with, or inducement from, any other bidder to submit a complementary or other noncompetitive bid.

4. If it is determined that the bidder(s) have violated any of these bid requirements then their bid shall be voided and if they were the successful bidder the lien and any deposits made in connection with said bid shall be forfeited.

Dated: January 25, 2023

THE NASSAU COUNTY TREASURER

Mineola, New York 136839

PUBLIC & LEGAL NOTICES

To place a notice here call us us at 516-569-4000 x232 or send an email to: legalnotices@liherald.com

137011 LEGAL NOTICE NOTICE OF SALE SUPREME COURT COUNTY OF NASSAU THE BANK OF NEW YORK MELLON (F/K/A THE BANK OF NEW YORK,
www.liherald.com Legal Notices are everyone’s business
February 2, 2023 — OCEANSIDE/ISLAND PARK HERALD 20
READ THEM

21 HERALD — February 2, 2023

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

Real estate IN BRIEF

NEW

VALLEY STREAM UFSD #13 WILLOW ROAD SCHOOL GREETER Candidate will be responsible for monitoring the main entrance of the school. NYS Fingerprinting required. $15-hour, candidate hired through Kelly Services Please email Résumé to: recruit@valleystream13.com Application Deadline: January 31, 2023 1202804

BUSDRIVERSWANTEDDoN’T MISS The Bus! EDU c ATI o NAL BUS TRANS po RTATI o N 516.454.2300

Big Bus $27.18/hr. Non-Benefit Rate

STARTING SALARIES Van $24.41/hr. Non-Benefit Rate

Elliman Employment HERALD 1128595

V.I.Properties Welcomes

Erit Gridnev

$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. EOE 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

Bartender, Seasoned Line Cook for Upscale Italian Restaurant. Walk in interviews: Sunday , Tuesday - Friday Between 5 and 9pm or Call 63- 694-7515 Ask for Sammy.

516-238-429 RecRuiting a great team is Really simple. a growing multi media company Based in garden city is Hiring: • Receptionist • 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

Erit Gridnev is a savvy real estate agent with over 15 years of experience in marketing and sales. Specializing in relocations, she understands the importance of finding the perfect property for her clients. Because she knows that moving to a new house is a very big change, Erit takes the time to get to know her clients and their specific needs. With a B.A in Human Services, she is able to provide valuable insight into community life and what to expect from different neighborhoods. Her wit and humor make her an enjoyable person to work with, and her expertise ensures that her clients are always satisfied with their purchase. Contact Erit at 510-584-6350 or by email eritg@vipropertiesny.com

Realtors are encouraged to send briefs and photographs to: Herald Homes, 2 Endo Blvd.., Garden City, NY 11530.

REAL ESTATE

Open Houses

Open Houses WOODMERE BA, 29 Woodmere Blvd, #3B, New To Market! Move Right Into This Sunny, Renovated 2 BR Coop Apt in Heathcote Bldg. Updtd Gran/Wood Kit w/ Stainless Steel Appl, LR w/Coffered Ceiling, Dining Area, Spacious Primary BR, Updtd Bth & 2nd BR. 9' Ceilings. HW Flrs. We HiRe tHe Best 1202116

CEDARHURST BA, 332B Peninsula Blvd, Move Right Into This Updated 3 Br, 2.5 Bth Coop Townhouse. LR, DR, Gran/Wood Kit w/ Stainless Steel Appl. Trex Deck Off LR.Primary Ste Features Updtd Bth & WIC. Att Gar Plus 1 Pkg Spot incl in Maintenance. W/D in Unit.Pull Down Attic.SD#15. Convenient to Shops, Trans & Houses of Worship...$449,00 Ronnie Gerber, Douglas Elliman 516-238-4299

HEWLETT 257 WILLARD Dr SUNDAY, 2/5, 12-1:30, REDUCED!! Spacious 5 BR, 3 Bth Exp Ranch With Open Layout.Main Floor Mstr Ste Plus Potential Mstr Ste on 2nd Flr.LR/Fpl, FDR, EIK & Sundrenched Family Rm w/ Doors to Deck. Fin Bsmt. Att Gar. Loads of Updates!! SD#20(Lynbrook)No Flood Insurance Req. MUST SEE THIS!..$1,025,000 Ronnie Gerber, Douglas Elliman 516-238-4299

Reduction! Move Right Into This Completely CLASSIFIED Fax your ad to: 516-622-7460 E-mail your 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 an ad.

Ronnie To pLACE your AD CALL 516-569-4000 - press 5

H1
EMPLOYMENT Help Wanted ACCOUNTANT PART-TIME For A Non-Profit Organization In East Meadow Seeking Experienced Individual For General Ledger Management Financial Reporting, Including Budgets For Federal And State Grants Send Resume To pvenezia@numc.edu. Administrative Assistant For Five Towns Law Firm Mgmt/ Computer Skills Mandatory Salary Commensurate With Experience. In Office Position Email Resume To Siberlaw@aol.com ADMINISTRATIVE ASSISTANT FT: RVC. Administrative Work, Answering Phones, Computer Skills – Microsoft, Excel, Outlook, Financial background helpful. Ask For Fran 516-763-9700 frances.difede@lpl.com CONSTRUCTION WORKERS Assist General Contractor Drivers License. Knowledge Of Construction. Call Mike. 516-887-8877. DRIVING INSTRUCTOR Company Car, Bonuses For Good Work. Must Have Clean Driving Record, Will Train. Eastern Queens & Nassau County. Retirees Welcome! Please call Bell Auto School At 516-365-5778 10am- 6pm Or Email: info@bellautoschool.com DRIVING INSTRUCTORS WANTED Will Certify And Train HS Diploma NYS License Clean 3 Years Call 516-731-3000 MEDICAL ASSISTANT FT MEDICAL FRONT DESK 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.com Or Call 516-569-6966 MEDICAL SECRETARY/ ASSISTANT PT/ FT: Garden City. Responsible, Reliable. Good Salary. Computer Experience Helpful, Will Train. Call 516-739-0333: Fax 516-739-0344 PART TIME ASSISTANTS Garden City Childcare Center Monday through Friday $15 per hour HS Diploma Required Call 516-572-7614 RECEPTIONIST/ P/T: SEASONAL, Warm, Friendly, Excellent People Skills, Office Work/ Customer Service, Beach Club. 516-239-2150 SECRETARY CHURCH OFFICE P/T $17/p.h. Tues, Weds, Thurs 9am-12pm. Clerical & Computer Skillls Required. Immed.. 516-547-7828. Email Resume vjl1030@yahoo.com UP TO $20.70 NYC, $20.00 L.I., $16.20 Upstate NY! If you need care from your relative, friend/ neighbor and you have Medicaid, they may be eligible to start taking care of you as personal assistant under NYS Medicaid CDPA Program. No Certificates needed. 347-713-3553 wait staff THE CHEF'S TABLE LYNBROOK is Seeking Part Time Experienced Servers,
Gut Renovated 4 BR, 3.5 Bth Col on 1/4 Acre Prop. New Kosher EIK, FDR, LR w/ Fpl, Den & Enclosed Porch. Radiant Htd Flrs. Full Fin Bsmt. 2 Car Att Gar. MUST SEE!! SD#20...$1,469,000
Gerber, Douglas
HEWLETT BA, 1608 Ridgeway Dr, Drastic Washer/Dryer in Unit. Large WIC.Parking Spot, Storage. SD#14. Maint Incl Taxes, Heat & Water..$315,000 Ronnie Gerber, Douglas Elliman 516-238-4299 WOODSBURGH BA, 155 Willow Rd, NEW!! Beautiful & Grand 4500 Sq ft CH Col, 4/5 BR, 4.5 Bth on Deep .6 Acre Private Prop. Large Gran/Wood EIK with Center Island Opens Into Family Rm w/ Skylit Vaulted Ceiling/Fpl,Large Formal Dining Room & Living Room. Primary Ste Boasts Gran Bth w/ Jacuzzi & Steam Plus XL WIC. 4 Spacious Bedrooms on 2nd Level. Fin Bsmt w/ Recreation Rm & Loads of Storage. 2 Car Att Garage. SD#14. Great Location! Won't Last!....$1,995,000 Ronnie Gerber, Douglas Elliman 516-238-4299 Apartments For Rent 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

HomesHERALD

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

Long Beach

Rare Rooftop Aqua Penthouse

Arare, one of a Kind “AQUA PH.” This penthouse features private elevator to stone floor foyer, magnificent views of the city and Atlantic Ocean from expansive windows. This home boasts utility room with washer/dryer and laundry sink, recessed lighting, hardwood floors in great room and hallways, fire protection sprinkler system, individually controlled high efficiency air-conditioning and heating system, re-circulating hot water system, cable television and telephone outlets. The custom kitchen features European hardwood cabinetry with custom hardware, Quartzite stone floor, distinctive granite countertops and mosaic glass tile backsplash, Wolf gas stove, Sub-Zero refrigerator and wine cooler, Miele dishwasher, Dacor microwave, Undermount kitchen sink with dual compartments, under cabinet lighting. The luxurious master bedroom suite features spacious walk-in closet and terrace, designer Kohler bathroom fixtures including whirlpool tub, walk-in shower with mosaic tile accents, marble appointments, European hardwood cabinetry with custom hardware. There are two parking spots “covered” with bike room and storage. You will enjoy spending a relaxing time in the Hot Tub.

My pickup truck has damaged the garage floor

Q. Can you solve a debate I have been having with my contractor about replacing the cracked floor in my garage? The problem is that I want to have steel bars in the slab and make it extra thick, since the existing slab is cracked and damaged from my heavy pickup truck, sometimes filled with heavy construction items. The concrete guy keeps telling me it’s overkill and that just the concrete, 5 inches thick, with a rollout wire mesh, is enough. Can you explain which one I need, and why he keeps telling me that the driveway is concrete, not cement? I want to do this job as soon as it warms up.

A. The first problem to solve is who should be designing the correct slab. Yes, we all know it’s just a slab, but you’ve already seen what happens when someone unfamiliar with the engineering design of even the simplest concrete slab doesn’t apply the correct preventive details. Concrete is very strong in compression, meaning you can press on it to extremes before it even shows small signs of failure.

Unfortunately, concrete has no tensile strength. Zero. Zip. This means you can easily pull it apart, or bend it to the point of cracking without much force.

Structural engineers and architects, to a lesser extent, are trained to apply specific formulas that predict the success (and failure) of even a slab of formed concrete. Knowing how a slab fails allows professionals to apply the right reinforcement in the right places. Otherwise you’re just guessing.

Rm w/ Doors to Deck. Fin Bsmt. Att Gar. Loads of Updates!! SD#20

(Lynbrook) No Flood Insurance Req. MUST SEE THIS! REDUCED!! $1,025,000

1608 Ridgeway Dr, BA, Move Right Into This Completely Gut Renovated 4 BR,

3.5 Bth Col on 1/4 Acre Prop. New Kosher EIK, FDR, LR w/ Fpl, Den & Enclosed

Porch. Radiant Heated Flrs. Full Fin Bsmt. 2 Car Att Gar. MUST SEE!!

SD#20 DRASTIC REDUCTION! $1,469,000

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 Rvated, 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 $699,000

1534 Broadway #205,

There’s a difference in the description of the slab, which is made up of several materials, such as sand, lime, and something called “Portland cement.” Portland Cement is a mixture of mined calcium silicates and a lesser amount of calcium aluminates that form a chemical reaction in the presence of water. The chemical reaction causes the mixture to harden and give off heat, called the heat of hydration. It was patented in England in 1824 by bricklayer Joseph Aspdin, and got the name Portland because when it hardened, it appeared to look very similar to the white Portland stone quarried along the Portland Isle coast of Dorset in southern England. Sorry, Oregon, you get no credit here.

When other silicates, such as sand or different sizes of stone, are added, the characteristics change, and the setting times and strength change as well. Ash has been added in some mixes, and glass fibers, another form of silica, have made our latest bridge and roadway construction projects extremely long-lasting and stronger.

Portland cement can be a part of concrete. To determine the reinforcing, the loads need to be applied to formulas, along with the amount of time and other forces, such as expansion and contraction (due to temperature changes), support material strength, shrinkage and internal stress — in other words, it would be irresponsible to throw some guess at you without knowing more. Keep in mind, more concrete is not better. Good luck!

© 2022 Monte Leeper

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.

H2 02/02 MoneyTo Lend 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)
Ask
The Architect Monte Leeper
HOME Of tHE WEEK
Tom Tripodi Tripodi | Shemtov Team Douglas Elliman Real Estate 30A West Park Avenue, Long Beach 516-902-3497 OPEN HOUSES SUNday, 2/5/23 WOO d SBURGH 155 Willow Rd, BA, NEW!! Beautiful & Grand 4500 Sq ft CH Col, 4/5 BR, 4.5 Bth on Deep .6 Acre Private Prop. Large Gran/Wood EIK with Center Island Opens Into Family Rm w/ Skylit Vaulted Ceiling/Fpl, Large Formal Dining Room & Living Room. Primary Ste Boasts Gran Bth w/ Jacuzzi & Steam Plus XL WIC. 4 Spacious Bedrooms on 2nd Level. Fin Bsmt w/ Recreation Rm & Loads of Storage. 2 Car Att Garage. SD#14. Great Location! Won’t Last! $1,995,000 WOO dMERE 29 Woodmere Blvd, #3B, BA, New To Market! Move Right Into This Sunny, Renovated 2 BR Coop Apt in Heathcote Bldg. Updtd Gran/Wood Kit w/ Stainless Steel Appl, LR w/Coffered Ceiling, Dining Area, Spacious Primary BR, Updtd Bth & 2nd BR. 9' Ceilings. HW Flrs. Washer/Dryer in Unit. Large WIC. Parking Spot, Storage. SD#14. Maint Incl Taxes, Heat & Water $315,000 HEWLETT 257 Willard Dr, 12-1:30, Spacious 5 BR, 3 Bth Exp Ranch With Open Layout. Main Floor Mstr Ste Plus Potential Mstr Ste on 2nd Flr. LR/Fpl, FDR, EIK & Sundrenched Family
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 BIG REDUCTION!! $699,000 CE da RHURST 332B Peninsula Blvd, BA, Move Right Into This Updated 3 Br, 2.5 Bth Coop Townhouse. LR, DR, Gran/Wood Kit w/ Stainless Steel Appl. Trex Deck Off LR. Primary Ste Features Updtd Bth & WIC. Att Gar Plus 1 Pkg Spot incl in Maintenance. W/D, Pull Down Attic, SD#15. Convenient to Shops, Trans & Houses of Worship $449,000 Fa R ROCK aWay 33-47 Bay Ct, BA, 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! REDUCED! $675,000 Ronnie Gerber 516-238-4299 1203126 OFFICE SPACE FOR RENT MERRICK ROAD, LYNBROOK Ditch the LIRR, Rent Local. For Rent: 3 Room Office Suite With Concierge Service 112 Merrick Road, Lynbrook Contact (516)599-1100 ext. 141 Ditch the LIRR, Rent Local. For Rent: 3 Room Office Suite With Concierge Service 112 Merrick Road, Lynbrook Contact (516)599-1100 ext. 141 Ditch the LIRR, Rent Local. For Rent: 3 Room Office Suite With Concierge Service 112 Merrick Road, Lynbrook Contact (516)599-1100 ext. 141 Ditch the LIRR, Rent Local. For Rent: 3 Room Office Suite With Concierge Service 112 Merrick Road, Lynbrook Contact (516)599-1100 ext. 141 Ditch the LIRR, Rent Local. For Rent: 3 Room Office Suite With Concierge Service 112 Merrick Road, Lynbrook Contact (516)599-1100 ext. 141 1101985 • Available Immediately • Furnished 1,500 Sq. Ft. 24 Hour Access With Full Security • Concierge Services Contact Broker/Owner 516-599-1100 Ext. 113 1201457 Results t hat Move You 1202330 1203124 This Robin won’t rest until you are in your new NEST! Robin Reiss Licensed Real Estate Salesperson Cell: 516.510.6484 Office: 516.623.4500 Robin.Reiss@elliman.com How’s the market?? Please contact me for your free market report and personalized service! 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) February 2, 2023 — HERALD 22
H3 02/02 MarketPlace HERALD 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 1197439 GUTTER CLEANING, REPAIRS & SEAMLESS GUTTER INSTALLATION GUTTER SCREENS Call 516-431-0799 Book Online at aboveallgutters.com 1200374 1203154 Wenk PIPING & HEATING CORP. If Your Plumbing STInkS Call The WenkS! 516-889-3200 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. 3/31/23 1203566 1199567 DBA BOB PHILLIPS PLUMBING Over 100 Years O f f amilY Plumbing Dave marlOW e Plumbing, inC. OffiCe : 516-766-4583 Call /T e XT: 516-840-9432 • Permits & Legalizations • Certified NYS Backflows • Licensed Master Plumber • Insured • FREE Estimates Mention this ad and get on labor only 10% Off Oil to Gas • Toilets • Faucets • Repairs & Replacements Waste Piping • Water Piping 1197304 Make 2023 The Year You Get Organized! 1202213 1203642 1203621 1198258 Residential and Commercial - All Phases “Anthony & J Home Improvement, Inc.” Also specializes in ★ Kitchens ★ Bathrooms ★ Finished Basements ★ Flooring ★ Repairs ★ Woodwork/mouldings ★ Siding ★ Gutters Carpentry & Painting Specialist 516- 678-6641– Licensed & Insured Free e st I m Ates...call Anthony r omeo Licensed & insured Free estimates senior Citizen Discounts Specializing 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 516-424-3598 516-807-3852 Call For Winter Specials ALFREDO’S CONSTRUCTION Se Habla Español 1201497 HEATING OIL HOME • COMMERCIAL RELIABLE • 24 HOUR EMERGENCY SERVICE FAMILY OWNED FOR OVER 65 YEARS CALL NOW FOR LOWEST PRICE ( 516) 379-2727 CALL FOR MORE INFO No service in Long Beach 1203130 WE GET YOUR SEWER AND DRAINS FLOWING AGAIN www.unclogitnow.com new customers only CALL NOW 888-777-9709 $69 Sewer $99 Hi-Tech Jetting $49 Drains JVR Plumbing & Heating - Nassau Master Plumber lic # 2520 Suffolk # 2111 /Ins 1198374 Snow Removal NYC We Move Snow For You Snow Removal and Ice Control Residential & Commercial 718-734-7146 Free Estimates SnowRemovalNyc1@gmail.com 1198340 1201212 FLOOR SANDING • STAINING • REFINISHING WOOD REPAIR AND INSTALLATION Residential | Commercial | Industrial CYCLONE PAINTING & GENERAL CONTRACTING CORP. Paul Milioto cel: 516-639-2380 nassau lic. H0431280000 / Insured. 1109488 To Place Your Card in the Here’s My Card Directory Just call 516-569-4000 press 5, then 2 23 OCEANSIDE/ISLAND PARK HERALD — February 2, 2023

MERCHANDISE MART

Antiques/Collectibles

We Buy Antiques, Fine Art & Jewelry

Same Day Service, Free In-Home Evaluations, 45 Year Family Business. Licensed and Bonded, Immediate Cash Paid. SYL-LEE ANTIQUES www.syl-leeantiques.com 516-671-6464

FINDS UNDER $100

Finds Under $100

COLE HAAN MEN'S Chelsea Boots Black Leather, 7W. Excellent $90 516-320-1906

HEALYS WHEELED SNEAKERS Boys size 7 black and yellow new in box $18. (516) 462-2656

NEW HYUNDAI SUV adjustable cross roof rails. cost $319. $99 firm (516)524-3617

ONE RECTANGULAR GLASS coffee table and two glass/brass octagon end tables, good cond. $99.99. 516-623-5696

STATIONARY EXERCISE BICYCLE -good condition -- $30. 516-826-3727

TWIN BEDROOM SET: Excellent Condition, Blonde Modern Headboard, 3 Dressers, Corner Piece. $99. 516-840-6081

TWIN WOOD TRUNDLE bed excellent condition $99 call/ text for pictures (516) 462-2656

Finds $100-$350

TREADMILL

Home Improvement

BATH & SHOWER UPDATES in as little as ONE DAY!

Tree Services

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

Satellite/TV Equipment

HANDY DANDY HOME IMPROVEMENTS

* Full Or Partial Kitchens/ Baths *Painting *Sheetrock *Taping/ Spackling *Installations Ceramic/ Vinyl Tile *Carpentry *Alterations *Repairs/ More. FREE ESTIMATES. Dan 516-342-0761

Miscellaneous

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

Plumbing

PLUMBER! PLUMBER! PLUMBER! FREE ESTIMATES! Heating, Repairs, Installations. $25 OFF New Customers. 24 Hour Emergency Response.

516-599-1011

GET DIRECTV FOR $64.99/mo for 12 months with CHOICE Package. Save an additional $120 over 1st year. 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

Education

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). Computer with internet is required.

TRAIN ONLINE TO DO MEDICAL BILLING! Become a Medical Office Professional online at CTI! Get Trained, Certified & ready to work in months! Call 855-543-6440. (M-F 8am-6pm ET). Computer with internet is required

Health & Fitness

VIAGRA AND CIALIS USERS! 50 Pills SPECIAL $99.00 FREE Shipping! 100% guaranteed. CALL NOW! 855-413-9574

AUTOMOBILE & MARINE

Autos For Sale

ACURA 2003, 3.2 CLS, 2 door, Silver, Black Interior, 160K Plus. Needs Battery. $1800 516-668-8877 runs great

Autos Wanted

***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

H4 02/02
PROFORM
Great Condition. $300
8877 SERVICES Cleaning Services MARINA'S CLEANING SERVICES: Cleaning Homes, Apartments, Condos, Offices. Experienced. FREE Estimates. Serving Long Island. 516-670-7764
E-Z ELECTRIC SERVICES, INC. All Types Residential/Commercial Wiring, Generators, Telephone/Data, Home Entertainment, Service Upgrades, Pools, Spas. Services/Repairs. Violations Removed. Free Estimates Low Rates. 516-785-0646 Lic/Ins. Handyman ALL HOUSEHOLD REPAIRS Interior and Exterior Services Painting, Plumbing, Carpentry, Electrical, Tile work, Pressure Washing, Flat Screen TV Installation Others Services Available Call 516 578 6980 HANDYMAN Repairs and Installations for the Household. Careful and Reliable and Vaccinated. Licensed and Insured. 30-Year Nassau County Resident. Friendly Frank Phone/Text 516-238-2112
GYM SIZE
516 668
Electricians
E-mail-Frankcav@optonline.net
Affordable prices - No payments for 18 months! Lifetime warranty & professional installs. Senior & Military Discounts available. Call: 866-393-3636 CARPENTRY & PAINTING: Residential/ Commercial. All Phases. Licensed/Insured. FREE ESTIMATES! Anthony & J Home Improvements 516-678-6641 DON'T PAY FOR Covered Home Repairs Again! American Residential Warranty covers ALL MAJOR SYSTEMS AND APPLIANCES. 30 DAY RISK FREE/ $100 OFF POPULAR PLANS. 833-398-0526
DRIVE OUT BREAST Cancer: Donate a car today! The benefits of donating your car or boat: Fast Free Pickup - 24hr Response Tax Deduction - Easy To Do! Call 24/7: 855-905-4755 WHEELS FOR WISHES benefiting MakeA-Wish® Northeast New York. Your Car Donations Matter NOW More Than Ever! Free Vehicle Pick Up ANYWHERE. We Accept Most Vehicles Running or Not. 100% Tax Deductible. Minimal To No Human Contact. Call: (877) 798-9474. Car Donation Foundation d/b/a Wheels For Wishes. www.wheelsforwishes.org. Junk Cars Wanted HIGHEST CA$H PAID All Cars Bought 24/7 FREE Pickup Serving Nassau County 41 Years No Title, No Keys=No Problem ID Required. CALL US LAST! Call us at 516-766-0000 HErald Crossword Puzzle Stuff HERALD 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 Want to sell your car, motorcycle or boat? Have we got a deal for you! You can advertise your vehicle in the Deals on Wheels Classifieds All for an amazing price! Your add will run until you sell your vehicle. Just call one of our expert classified account executives today and you will be on your way to making a great deal on your set of wheels! 516-569-4000 press 5, then 2 NEED A CAR? F ind it in the HERALD Classifieds. CRAZY? February 2, 2023 — OCEANSIDE/ISLAND PARK HERALD 24

The era of ‘Marcus Welby, M.D.’ is over

I’ll bet very few readers remember television shows like “Dr. Kildare” and “Marcus Welby.” Those popular shows featured physicians who made house calls and performed miracles of all kinds. There may be a few of these doctors left, but it’s only a matter of time until such dedicated physicians are no longer in existence. Like it or not, the business of medicine is changing rapidly, and not for the benefit of the average patient.

I recently experienced this sea change in medicine, when two of my doctors announced their retirement. One was my internal medicine doctor, who served me faithfully for 32 years, and the other was a neurologist who had monitored me for about five years. It was obvious from our parting conversations that they were exhausted and tired of the day-to-day stresses of serving patients.

If you visit almost any doctor’s office, you’ll notice that there are walls and

walls of files on display. They may signify how many patients your doctor serves, but they are also evidence of the amount of paperwork the average doctor must do to get paid by an insurance company. Once upon a time, insurance companies gave doctors an appropriate amount of money for the services they performed, but not anymore.

If you’re a doctor in New York City, you may get $1,000 for a medical procedure. But if you practice in, say, Smithtown, you may get paid $180, if you’re lucky. Geography makes a difference in reimbursement, and no rational observer of medicine will defend such an abominable system. These days, doctors need experienced staff members who have to deal with endless piles of documents, many of which are for small reimbursements. The daily practice of medicine isn’t a 9-to-5 operation. Many doctors take their charts home, to review medical histories and also to protect themselves from malpractice litigation. The business of suing doctors is a major enterprise, and the volume of litigation forces doctors to pay

outrageous fees for malpractice coverage. I’ve heard quite a few stories about doctors who quit the practice because they simply couldn’t afford the high premiums.

One way that a doctor can avoid some of these headaches is to become an employee of a hospital. That spares you the high insurance premiums, but life isn’t a bowl of cherries for the employed doctor, either. Large hospitals have rules upon rules, and they can mean plenty of paperwork, and having to handle a much larger caseload of patients then you ever had when you were on your own. One of my longtime, highly respected doctors has taken a leave of absence, because he’s now in his 80s and just can’t handle the caseload he’s been given. But hospitals are businesses, and they have every right to demand a high level of activity of their doctors.

There are many dedicated, newly minted doctors graduating from medical schools, but quite a few of them approach medicine much differently today than their forebears. Many young

doctors would prefer to work five days a week, with no weekend duty. They are willing to take less compensation and have more time for family, golf and vacations. They may be brilliant practitioners, but they don’t want to be so many Marcus Welbys.

And when we talk about medicine, we can’t forget about nurses. The recent strike at some major city hospitals was no surprise. I was in an ER recently, and found out that my nurse had 15 patients assigned to her. She was on the verge of a physical breakdown, but soldiered on, handling all of them with grace and patience. No doubt, she will get a large pay increase and a smaller patient workload, but it’s only fair to give her those benefits.

Like it or not, medicine is changing dramatically. In the next 10 years, we will see changes that we never dreamt of. Some will be good, and others bad. Let’s hope there are more good than bad.

Jerry Kremer was an assemblyman for 23 years, and chaired the Assembly’s Ways and Means Committee for 12 years. He now heads Empire Government Strategies, a business development and legislative strategy firm. Comments about this column? jkremer@liherald.com.

Folks scramble as the price of eggs soars nationwide

You can believe the hype. Last week, a boutique grocery on Manhattan’s Upper East Side was selling eggs for $17.99 a dozen. They weren’t Faberge eggs, dripping in diamonds and gilt. They were ordinary chicken-hatched, single-yolk, large “organic” eggs.

This news flash is courtesy of The Guardian newspaper in England, which loves to point out the crass and the crazy in American culture. It is given to gloating through stiff upper lips. Still, it has a point.

RANDI KREISS

Egg prices are heating up due to inflation, a surging avian flu epidemic and, some say, price gouging.

According to the U.S. Department of Agriculture, one year ago you could buy a dozen eggs for $1.72. Now, nationwide, the price averages $3.59. In some states like California, the average price is more than $7. Apparently in Manhattan, consumers have jumped from the frying pan into the fire. No more cheap, go-to weekday omelet dinners.

The current epidemic of avian flu is

the worst in history, according to NBC News. More than 53 million birds have died of the virus or been put to death. As so-far survivors of the coronavirus pandemic, we must wonder how vulnerable we humans are to this flu.

According to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, we’re probably safe. That’s not totally reassuring, but the avian flu has jumped to humans in only rare instances, and has passed from an infected person to other people in only extremely rare cases. Those who’ve contracted the flu after working around infected birds generally experienced mild symptoms, but the disease has been serious in a few people.

of Mexico to the U.S. I don’t know if it’s a Sinaloa cartel operation, but really? Smugglers in competition with the Easter Bunny?

Inflation?

I take my eggs very seriously. Omelets are a regular dinner in my home. I eat an egg every single day, over well, yolk broken. Lillybee the dog gets half a yolk.

Avian flu?

Price gouging?

No more cheap, go-to weekday omelet dinners.

Somehow, I want to believe human beings should be OK, but after the waves of half-information and misinformation informing our health decisions in the midst of Covid, I want to keep an eye on this H5N1 virus. Even though it might seem cost-effective now to start raising chickens in our backyards, nah, it’s probably not a good idea.

Last week it was widely reported that dealers have been running eggs out

I had to give up eggs recently and temporarily (for a month) after my friend cracked an egg and discovered a tiny, blackened mini-chicken inside. So gross! I didn’t actually see the monstrosity, but I can’t get the image out of my head. She was so traumatized by the visitation that she gave up eggs forever.

We move on. The most expensive egg product I ever purchased was a painted $25 ostrich eggshell I brought back from South Africa to present to my granddaughter on her 13th birthday. I was feeling quite high-minded about the symbolism of feminism and new beginnings and eternal life. But she sat on it, and that was that.

Two weeks ago, I cracked an egg and discovered it was a double yolker. According to Cackle Hatchery, double yolks are quite rare. They hardly ever

result in two chickens being born, because the eggshell can’t accommodate twins. Still, they are prized for eating. Some boutique chicken farmers specialize in double yolkers, the source of which is a genetic mutation. You can hold a candle to an egg and see what’s inside if you really need to know. If you really want to know.

Hardboiled eggs are worth a book of their own. I always have a few hardcooked eggs in my fridge, you know, in case of nuclear attack or tornado strike. I read about an 83-year-old hiker years ago who hiked the entire Appalachian Trail, from Georgia to Maine, eating hardboiled eggs he cooked on a tiny camping stove.

In the 1967 movie “Cool Hand Luke,” an outrageously defiant prisoner played by Paul Newman choked down 50 hardboiled eggs on a dare. A few people in real life tried to imitate the feat, and one died. But Joey Chestnut, the renowned competitive eater, consumed 141 eggs in eight minutes in a contest. Miki Sudo broke the women’s world record, eating 104 eggs.

Chestnut, who, remarkably, is still alive — I checked — took home a $1,500 grand prize, which seems not nearly enough.

Copyright 2023 Randi Kreiss. Randi can be reached at randik3@aol.com.

25 OCEANSIDE/ISLAND PARK HERALD — February 2, 2023
opINIoNS
It was obvious from chats with my retiring doctors that they were exhausted.
JERRY KREMER

The tricky balance of fear and openness

it was like having security cameras in every room of a house but one. That’s how Suffolk County Executive Steve Bellone described to reporters the decentralized, hodgepodge security infrastructure of the county’s computer network, which more than 10,000 government employees, in dozens of departments, depended on.

It was a single unguarded entryway that let hackers in last September, essentially shutting down all operations and reportedly costing Suffolk millions of dollars.

Such an intrusion is enough to scare any business or government entity into fortifying defenses. But is there such a thing as being too scared?

In the days following Suffolk’s revelation that it had been hacked, Bellone’s counterpart, Nassau County Executive Bruce Blakeman, bent over backward to ensure that the same thing won’t happen here. Or at least we think he has, given that the details of those efforts are a closely held secret.

What we do know is that the Legislature has hired a cybersecurity consultant. And that’s about it. Who that consultant is, what they have to offer — and, most important, how much it’s going to cost taxpayers — is information only a very select few know.

Revealing too many details about the new cybersecurity efforts could be troublesome, of course. The more information hackers have, the more likely they can

letters

Offner was on the mark

To the Editor:

Re Daniel Offner’s column last week, “We must remember — and teach — the Holocaust”: Offner’s description of his grandmother, “When she was liberated by American troops from Dachau in May 1945, she weighed 45 pounds,” brought back an old memory to me. I remember my dad speaking of two cousins, who somehow made it to America after surviving one of those Nazi killing centers in Poland. He described them as two young guys, each over six feet tall and weighing 200 pounds — combined.

They didn’t last much longer than a year here. The Nazis killed them; they just didn’t die immediately.

And now we have Holocaust deniers, in spite of the films, photos and documents that exist, in addition to the survivors, and the living veterans who aided in their liberation and survival. We also have politicians in both parties telling us lies daily. Now we even have to be aware of a “journalist’s” political affiliations, agenda and beliefs. Sadly, as Offner pointed out, the same goes

find ways to slip past Nassau’s defenses. Yet county officials refuse to say how revealing simple bits of information — like who the vendor is, and how much they’re charging — would help these cyber menaces. And they aren’t budging.

As well, the Herald learned last week that a closed-doors executive session called by the Legislature produced an emergency cybersecurity declaration — its mere existence classified.

It’s perfectly understandable why county officials are on edge, and they should be commended for acting quickly to build Nassau’s technological defenses. And while many of those details should be kept secret, not all of them should be.

There is a reason why who our government does business with — and at what cost — should be out in the open, for all to see. We bear the financial cost of that business, and have every right to ensure that every dollar is being spent appropriately.

Everything about the county’s contract with this mystery cybersecurity firm could be perfectly fine. And it most likely is. But the taxpayers’ right is absolute assurance, not a preponderance of confidence. We have the right — by law — to make sure the Legislature is doing an arm’s-length deal with the right company for the right price.

How was the firm chosen? How was its compensation negotiated? What is the county getting in return? Even if we can’t have specifics, there’s no reason we can’t be clued in on at least some general

aspects.

Shoshanah Bewlay, executive director of the state-funded Committee on Open Government, shared in an advisory opinion last month that details of the contract — like information technology schematics, blueprints, pricing or systems methodologies, and the types of IT monitoring or remediation — can indeed be kept quiet. “However, in our view,” Bewlay added, “it is not clear how the disclosure of other information contained within the contract — such as the name of the selected vendor, or value of the executed contract — would enable a person to adversely impact an agency’s electronic information or IT systems.”

Don’t get us wrong — we honestly believe there is no ill intention on the county’s part to withhold this information. Officials are scared that revealing any of it — even if it’s deemed safe — could upend all their efforts to protect the network. But they have to lift the cloak just enough to let the taxpayers — their true bosses — get a peek to assure themselves that all of this is on the up-and-up.

Nassau County is letting all of its hard work to build these defenses get obscured by this simple request to know who it is working with, and how much they are being paid for that work. That’s basic information that taxpayers shouldn’t even have to ask for.

But they are asking for it, and the county must do the right thing and provide the answer.

Herald editorial
February 2, 2023 — OCEANSIDE/ISLAND PARK HERALD 26 Oceanside/island park HERALD Established 1966 Incorporating the Oceanside Beacon Record of Oceanside Karina Kovac Editor Kevin MccLeneGHan Multi Media Marketing Consultant eLLen friscH Multi Media Marketing Consultant office 2 Endo Boulevard Garden City, NY 11530 Phone: (516) 569-4000 Fax: (516) 569-4942 Web: www.liherald.com E-mail: oceaneditor@liherald.com officiaL neWsPaPer: Island Park Public School District Copyright © 2023 Richner Communications, Inc.
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HERALD

D’Esposito will get the job done in Washington e

arlier this month I had the privilege of speaking at the ceremonial swearing-in of newly elected U.S. Rep. Anthony D’Esposito. Sitting on the stage that evening, I thought back to when I was first sworn in 30 years ago, and how different this night was from that one, and how different the world had become. This ceremonial event was held at the Nassau County police training center, in East Garden City, instead of in Washington, D.C., and the oath was administered by former Senator Al D’Amato instead of House Speaker Kevin McCarthy.

D’Esposito had been officially sworn in by McCarthy the week before, but that was at 2 a.m. on Jan. 7, following over four days and 15 ballots of voting in the most acrimonious contest for speaker since the 1850s, the decade preceding the Civil War. During my 28 years in Congress, I cast 14 ballots for speaker — one every two years. D’Esposito exceeded that total in his very first week in Congress!

This rancor and chaos is a sign of what Congress has become, and what D’Esposito must work through. Don’t get me wrong — Congress wasn’t all peace, love and harmony when I was elected. Soon-to-be House Speaker Newt Gingrich and President Bill Clinton were firing political rockets at each other, and fiery cable news shows were emerging. But there wasn’t this level of intra-party disunity.

Nonetheless, D’Esposito’s situation isn’t entirely different from what I faced. We have several things in common. We both won close, hard-fought races. I won by 8,000 votes, a margin of 3 percent; D’Esposito by 10,000, or 3.9 percent. The bulk of my district was in the Town of Hempstead and Long Beach. D’Esposito’s district is entirely within those boundaries. And the challenges he will confront are similar to what I faced during my latter 20 years in Congress: preventing another Sept. 11, and fighting to get New York and Long Island their fair share of revenue. Fortunately, D’Esposito’s committee assignments — Homeland Security and Transportation & Infrastructure — position him well for the struggles

Letters

for our educational institutions.

I was lucky. The U.S. Navy took me to dozens of foreign nations. If you were born here, count your blessings. There are many tougher places to grow up in. Our most precious resource is America’s children. If we give them our honest best, freedom will reign.

It’s Santos, for better or worse

To the Editor:

At a news event on Jan. 11, a parade of Nassau County Republicans took the extraordinarily courageous step of calling on their colleague, U.S. Rep. George Santos, to resign. They suggested that he was not welcome at either their headquarters or their events. They indicated that their other congressional representatives would take it upon themselves to provide representation to the people of the 3rd District — the people Santos was elected to represent.

On Jan. 18, I received an email from my old friend Rep. Andrew Garbarino, who represents the 2nd District, in Suffolk County, advising me that I was one of his “new constituents” and assuring me that I could rely on his office’s

resources. Along with everyone else in northern Nassau and Queens, I live in Santos’s district. I am not officially a constituent of Garbarino’s.

In response, I emailed Andy Garbarino, “While I appreciate you reaching out, you are not my Congressional representative and I am not your ‘new constituent.’ George Santos, with whom and for whom you campaigned, is my Congressional representative. That fact is truly shameful. Thanks again and wishing you well.”

So, to Congressman Garbarino, with whom I worked in the Assembly before he was elected to the House of Representatives, I simply say, “Thanks but no thanks.” For better or worse, Santos is our congressman, and I expect him, perhaps unrealistically, to make some effort to try to live up to his responsibilities.

I am not inclined to reach out to the same Republican politicians who offer assistance but are simply attempting to shield themselves from criticism. As the old saying goes, once bitten, twice shy.

Should Santos be unresponsive to any requests I may have for assistance to the people I represent, I will reach out to Senators Chuck Schumer or Kirsten Gillibrand, or to any number of Democratic congressional representatives.

ahead.

The Homeland Security Committee was created in the immediate aftermath of 9/11 to coordinate federal, state and local counterterrorism efforts, and to provide necessary funding to areas at highest risk. Every threat analysis showed the New York City-Long Island region as the highestranked terrorist target in the country. Yet we had to fight off other states, which had zero threat levels, for every penny. As a former New York City police detective and Island Park fire chief, D’Esposito has the credentials and the gravitas to win those funding fights, and also to ensure that the committee’s legitimate concern about border control and illegal immigration doesn’t distract attention from the still very serious terrorist threat.

He will have similar struggles on the Transportation & Infrastructure Committee, to get fair and necessary funding for Long Island’s roads, highways, beaches and waterways.

Over the years, New York has been consistently shortchanged in federal funding, sending far more money to Washington than we get back. My short-

hand political analysis for this inequity was that Democrats took New York for granted and Republicans felt they couldn’t win it, so our hard-earned tax dollars were disbursed elsewhere — most notably, and disproportionately, to southern states. This shortfall in turn increased our state and local tax burden, which was exacerbated when a Republican Congress voted to dramatically reduce our SALT income tax deduction. D’Esposito has pledged to fight hard to restore that deduction.

Besides Homeland Security, infrastructure funding and restoring the SALT deduction, he will have to deal with countless other issues, including senior citizen and veterans benefits, 9/11 health care, tax relief for hardworking middle-income families and supporting law enforcement.

Being a member of Congress, and representing the people of Long Island and addressing their needs and challenges, was the experience of a lifetime for me. No one is more connected to his constituents than Anthony D’Esposito, and I know he will take their thoughts and concerns to the halls of Congress and get the job done. Good luck, Congressman.

Peter King is a former congressman, and a former chair of the House Committee on Homeland Security.

27 OCEANSIDE/ISLAND PARK HERALD — February 2, 2023
opinions
In a normal winter, this would be a skating rink — East Rockaway
peter
a newcomer to Congress has two solid committee assignments.
kinG
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