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APRIL 18 - 24, 2024
$1.00
Island Park gets $600K in funding for infrastructure By KEPHERD DANIEL kdaniel@liherald.com
Keith Rossein/Herald
Hempstead Town Councilwoman Laura Ryder, far left, with Bill Kallinikos, Joe Cibellis, Janet Pearsall and Town Supervisor Don Clavin.
An honorable night for the Kiwanettes Service organization’s awards dinner draws big crowd By KEPHERD DANIEL kdaniel@liherald.com
The Kiwanettes of Oceanside hosted an awards dinner at Lambrou’s Catering Hall in Island Park on April 11 to honor several community members who have made significant contributions to the area. The Kiwanettes have served Oceanside since 1955, providing holiday items and gifts for needy families, organizing luncheons for seniors residents, creating a scholarship for Oceanside High School graduates and making donations to other service organizations. Each year the organization recognizes individuals and groups whose efforts stand out. Kiwanettes President Janet Pearsall welcomed the crowd of nearly 200, which includ-
ed community leaders and elected officials, to the event. State Sen. Patricia CanzoneriFitzpatrick praised the group for its service, and presented the awards to its honorees. “I want to thank the Kiwanettes for what they’re doing to honor the community,” Canzoneri-Fitzpatrick said. “I say all the time that the government can only do so much, and it’s organizations like the Kiwanettes that help us do so much in the community.” The honorees were Joe Cibellis, vice president of the Oceanside Chamber of Commerce, and the staff at Towers Funeral Home, led by owner Bill Kallinikos. Towers was presented with the Public Service Award, for its staffers’ volunteer work to promote service in the hamlet. Cibellis, who is ConTinueD on Page 11
About $600,000 in federal funding has been earmarked for Island Park to upgrade the village’s drainage systems, resurface a major section of Long Beach Road and reconstruct sidewalks and parking lots. The funding has been set aside for the village’s transitoriented development project, which aligns with Island Park’s long-term vision — to enhance its transportation infrastructure, promote mass transit opportunities, and support potential development initiatives along Long Beach Road and other areas within the transit-oriented development zone, which includes Railroad Place and Long Beach Road down to the Intersection of Island Parkway and Long Beach Road. Rep. Anthony D’Esposito and other Long Island representatives in Congress secured a total of nearly $87 million in funds for infrastructure improvements and upgrades to public services and community facilities across the island in a spending package approved on March 22. The transit-oriented d eve l o p m e n t p r o j e c t a l s o involves a partnership with Nassau County and New York State, in which the village competed for and received a $1 mil-
lion grant for the planning, drainage and resurfacing of Long Beach Road, from the intersection of Island Parkway and Long Beach Road to the intersection of Warwick and Long Beach Road. The village recently was notified of the awarded grant in which the village partnered with Nassau County to help with the administration of the grant. This first phase of the Island Park project also includes the reconstruction of drainage systems to prevent flooding, as well as rebuilding curbs and sidewalks and installing traffic mitigation measures. Among traffic mitigation efforts that the village is looking into the installation of a left a turn signal on the corner of Warwick Road and Long Beach Road. The second phase will address the reconstruction of drainage systems in municipal parking lots, particularly those adjacent to mass transit hubs like the Long Island Rail Road a n d N a s s a u I n t e r- C o u n t y Express bus system. This phase will also involve the reconstruction of parking lots, including a portion of the LIRR lot on Nassau Lane. That portion of the project is tied into LIRR’s plan to reconstruct its parking lots in Island Park. ConTinueD on Page 7