_________________ WANTAGH ________________
HERALD Embarking on a new journey
Getting inventive at summer camp
Confirmed case of rabies
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Vol. 72 No. 33
AUGUST 8 - 14, 2024
$1.00
Serving with kindness at L.I. Cares gram, busy, when she passed by the organization’s HuntingThis is part two in a series ton location and saw it needed about Seaford residents who volunteers. After doing some provide assistance at Long research, Mirer found the food pantry to be a great outlet to Island Cares. keep Magilavy engaged and Seaford resident Debbie active. Once they filled out the Mirer has displayed hard work necessary paperwork, the two have volunteered while perfor ming there every week all of her tasks since then and with kindness at have loved it. the food bank run Their volunteer by Long Island work includes a Cares. variety of different Mirer, who has tasks, such as volunteered with restocking shelves the organization’s and picking up inde pendent supd e l ive r i e s t o b e port services, a speplaced in the stockcial needs program, ro o m . T h e m o s t for 18 years, has important part of teamed up with their job, Mirer Matthew Magilavy, said, is assisting who has autism, as customers in a volunteers to assist mini-supermarket. clients at the food HARRiSoN SMiTH bank. Satellite and disaster The two would take c u s t o m e r s d ow n L o n g I s l a n d relief coordinator, each aisle and Cares Inc. is a food Long Island Cares show them the food bank with 200 sites they have on their scattered throughout the U.S. and is dedicated to shelves. Mirer spoke fondly of Magifeeding individuals and familavy and the assistance he prolies in their communities. In 2016, Mirer was looking vides at the food bank. With for volunteer work to keep careful direction, Magilavy M a g i l av y, wh o m s h e m e t Continued on page 2 through the special needs pro-
By lARA MURRAY-STERZEl
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Tim Baker/Herald
Bearers of the torch Justin Heller, left, with Danny Cronin and Peyton Nemeth, carrying a torch during the Seaford Recreation program at the district’s middle school on Aug. 1. Story, more photos, Page 10.
Town of Hempstead sues Florida sanctuary over unreturned dogs By CHARlES SHAW cshaw@liherald.com
The Town of Hempstead is taking legal action to recover four dogs from an animal sanctuary in Florida, claiming the organization violated the town’s agreement plan to care for them. The dogs were originally placed in the town animal shelter in Wantagh. On July 26, the town filed a lawsuit against PawsEver Home, a nonprofit facility in Fort Lauderdale, Florida, to recover the dogs, which were transferred to the sanctuary by the town six months ago. The Town of Hempstead had given the dogs to PawsEver to provide them a better
life after years of unsuccessful adoptions. But in a June 17 letter addressed to Michael Breitsprecher, the sanctuary’s president, the town informed the sanctuary that it had terminated its agreement with PawsEver, and demanded that all town animals in its possession be returned. The Florida rescue began caring for the dogs after Breitsprecher signed an agreement in February to become a “placement partner” with the town animal shelter. The partnership, according to the agreement, is “a collaborative program designed to provide dogs and cats a second chance in a loving home and to increase the save Continued on page 4
hen Debbie comes in and organizes the stockroom, I think the work that she’s done in that sense is outstanding.