__________ SEA Cliff/glEn hEAd __________
HERALD Gazette suozzi, santos race for Congress
Glen Cove man seeking a kidney
Village square cuts its ribbons
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OCTOBER 15 - 21, 2020
VOl. 29 NO. 42
Sea Cliff Library gets $50K grant and collections, but once children hit middle school, there wasn’t much for them. With a recent $50,000 New Purcell said she hoped to use York state grant, Sea Cliff Vil- part of the grant to purchase lage Library officials plan to pur- carrels for the teen space — indichase new furniture, vidual desks with carpeting and front their surfaces doors, and expand blocked from others t h e t e e n s p a c e, — which she said l i b r a r y D i re c t o r would be for studyCamille Purcell said. ing. She has worked A representative with librarians at of State Sen. Jim North Shore Middle Gaughran apSchool and North proached library Shore High School officials in January to learn more about to see if the library what students need, needed funds. Arand, she said, she lene Nevens, who hoped to help teens was then the direcintegrate more into tor and retired a the village library’s month later, presentculture. ed ideas on how the “If we can make money might be them come to the spent to Gaughran. library, make them W h e n P u r c e l l aRlENE NEVENs feel invested in it and became director in Former library make them feel welFebruary, she immecomed through prodiately went to work director gramming and giving to enhance the them ownership of a library’s collection of young- space where they can feel safe and adult books to better serve the comfortable,” Purcell said, “I teen population of readers. The think we’ll be doing a tremendous children’s library, she said, has service to that population.” long had extensive programs Continued on page 17
By MikE CONN
mconn@liherald.com
W
Mike Conn/Herald Gazette
PROfEssOR JaMiE VaudREy, left, and Save the Sound’s Tracy Brown said that the North Shore’s open water could be healthier.
Save the Sound ‘report card’ grades the North Shore’s bays By MikE CONN mconn@liherald.com
Representatives of the Long Island Sound environmental action group Save the Sound joined elected officials and other environmental activists at a news conference in Theodore Roosevelt Memorial Park in Oyster Bay on Oct. 6 to share Save the Sound’s “report card” on the health of the sound’s many bays. The organization publishes its assessment of the
sound’s ecological health every two years, but this year’s was the first to focus on the bays. Tracy Brown, Save the Sound’s regional director of water pollution and protection, said the sound is one of North America’s most heavily populated and biologically diverse estuaries. It is a critical nursery for marine life up and down the Eastern Seaboard, she said, and it also generates nearly $17 billion in income every year.
“The Long Island Sound is our national park,” said U.S. Rep. Tom Suozzi. “This is an a m a z i n g , e x t r a o rd i n a r y national treasure that we’ve got right in our backyards.” Brown said that 23 groups of researchers ventured out into the sound on boats every two weeks from May through October. They sampled the water in each of its 38 bays — in New York City, Westchester County and Connecticut and on Long Island — and Continued on page 4
e’re looking forward to really finishing the inside of the building [and] updating it while keeping still with the look of it.