Dressler to enter the essay contest in which she received state recognition.
Sixth-grader takes chance, earns praise
By CHARLES SHAW cshaw@liherald.comFor Wantagh Middle School sixth-grader Emily Dressler, it’s always good to take chances, because you never know how far that might take you.

In February, Emily, 11, took part in a fifth-grade essay contest, writing about the significance of the American flag. The Daughters of the American Revolution, an organization dedicated to historical preservation and education, organized the event. Her essay, “What the Flag Means to Me,” was selected as the winner by the group’s Wantagh chapter, and this month, it was awarded an honorable mention in the organization’s state competition for 2023.
The win took Emily by surprise.
“When I heard that I had won the whole thing, I was in complete shock,” she said.
CONTINUED ON PAGE 5
Sixth Alzheimer’s Walk coming to Eisenhower Park


The “Walk To End Alzheimer’s” — one of the largest events to raise awareness and funds for the care, support and research of the disease — is headed to Eisenhower Park on Oct. 1.
The walk takes place in 600 communities nationwide and will kick off at 10:30 a.m. in the park’s Field 6/6A. In the past, on Long Island, the walk marched through Belmont Lake State Park in Babylon, according to Tina Hardekopf, the director of development with the Alzheimer’s Association Long Island chapter.
“As time passed, we started realizing when we look at the people involved, we see that they’re traveling from Nassau County, the Hamptons and from the east end,” she said. “We realized that we needed one out east, so we added a Yaphank walk. As we started to grow the Yaphank walk, we realized that we needed something in Nassau County.”
The Eisenhower Park walk is entering its sixth year, Hardekopf added, and its co-chairs are Edward Miller, a partner with Grant Thorton, a national accounting firm, and Armando D’Accordo.
D’Accordo, a Wantagh resi -

dent and owner of CMIT Solutions, an IT company in Merrick, became involved with the Alzheimer’s Association because both of his parents have faced difficult journeys with the disease. His father, Vincent, succumbed to the disease last August at the age of 88, and his mom, Vincenza, 88, is still battling it.
Alzheimer’s disease, D’Accordo said, affects the entire family. The Alzheimer’s Association offers families constant support, resources, advice and even reading material, so they can better understand what their loved ones are going through.
“It’s not a straight line,” D’Accordo said of the disease.
“It’s not predictable. My advice to people, since I’ve gone through it, is try to make some decisions, try to get a plan in place. Be ready to change, because circumstances change. There’s so many variables.”
D’Accordo described the walk as “one giant hug.”
“Everybody’s supporting each other,” he said. “Everybody’s at a different stage of their journey with their loved ones, and they really need each other. It’s really cathartic and it’s really helpful to be there.”
Walkers can register individually, with teams started by families and friends, or with corpo-
CONTINUED ON PAGE 11
A walk in the park to help those in need
Last Sunday, The Huntington’s Disease Society of America’s northeast region hosted the Team Hope Walk at Wantagh Park. The event is the organization’s largest grassroots fundraising event, which takes place in over 100 cities across the country. Since its inception in 2007, the event has raised more than $27 million for Huntington’s disease.
At the park, friends, families, neighbors, and communities came together to support the organization’s mission to improve the lives of people affected by the disease.
“It is inspiring to see the incredible outpouring of support our Huntington’s disease community receives at our Team Hope walk event,” Melinda Jenson, the regional development officer of the organization’s northeast region, said.


Huntington’s disease is a fatal genetic disease that affects the nerve cells in the brain. According to the organization, there are around 41,000 Americans
who are symptomatic, and more than 200,000 who are at risk of inheriting the disease.






“It is a welcoming space for new Huntington’s disease families to find
community,” Jenson said of the event, “and all walkers leave the day with a renewed sense of motivation, determination, and courage to continue the fight against Huntington’s disease.”
Candle ceremony honors 9/11 victims
Twenty-two years later, communities continue to pay their respects for those who died on 9/11.

On Sept. 11, the Seaford 9/11 committee hosted their annual memorial candle lighting ceremony at the commemorative plaza at Seaford High School. Members of nearby communities came together to honor the memory of those who died on Sept. 11, 2001.
Among those who died that day were five Seaford alumni, which the plaza is dedicated to. These men were Thomas and Timothy Haskell, Robert Sliwak, John William Perry and Michael Wittenstein.
Representatives from the Seaford, Wantagh, and Freeport fire departments were present, along with the Nassau Police Department and other first responders.
A bell toll honored the memory of those who died on 9/11, along with members of the armed forces and Covid victims. The bell toll also thanked the Seaford community for its support and prayers for the past 22 years.


The Seaford High School band played the national anthem, while the Nassau County Police pipe and drum band also performed.

The candle ceremony was a touching memorial for the 9/11 victims, and is a reminder that Seaford, Wantagh, and other communities, will always remember the lives lost on that tragic day.
–Charles ShawThe Seaford memorial plaza honors the memory of five Seaford alumni who died on 9/11.

Suzanne Ettinger Attorneys-at-Law





The Power of Intuition
In grade school we are taught there are fve senses – sight, hearing, taste, touch and smell. Our sixth sense, intuition, gets short shrift resulting in many never learning its value or how to use it. Ralph Waldo Emerson, in his renowned essay entitled “Self-Reliance”, wrote “we denote this primary wisdom as intuition, whilst all later teachings are tuitions”. Each one of us receives these “intuitions” on a regular basis, but only the fortunate few learn how to use them to increase their well-being.
Here are what some thought leaders have said about this powerful human asset:
“You must train your intuition — you must trust the small voice inside you which tells you exactly what to say, what to decide.”
– Ingrid Berman
“Intuition is a very powerful thing, more powerful that intellect.”
– Steve Jobs
“I’ve trusted the still, small voice of intuition my entire life. And the only time I’ve made mistakes is when I didn’t listen.”
– Oprah Winfrey
Business shut down for illegal activity
“The more you trust your intuition, the more empowered you become, the stronger you become, and the happier you become.”
– Gisele Bundchen
“The intuitive mind is a sacred gift and the rational mind is a faithful servant. We have created a society that honors the servant and has forgotten the gift. I believe in intuition and inspiration. At times I feel certain I am right while not knowing the reason.”
– Albert Einstein
“Women observe subconsciously a thousand little details without knowing they are doing so. Their subconscious mind adds these little things together — and they call the result intuition.”
– Agatha Christie
To learn more about intuitive thinking, try “Blink: The Power of Thinking Without Thinking” by Malcolm Gladwell, or “Gut Feelings: The Intelligence of The Unconscious” by Gerd Gigerenzer.
ETTINGER LAW FIRM

A Wantagh business was closed on Sept. 14, after Nassau County detectives determined the location was being used for illegal massages and prostitution.
The Town of Hempstead Building Department issued numerous code violations and boarded up the illegal business at 2901-S Wantagh ave. The storefront was closed under chapter 90, section 15 of the town code, and the building presented a hazard to public health, safety and welfare of those within the property and the areas surrounding the illegal business, according to the department.
In a press release, Hempstead Town Supervisor Don Clavin said the town is committed to keeping neighbors safe and preserving the suburban quality of life enjoyed by residents.
“The illegal business that was conducted at this storefront is immoral and hazardous for neighbors,” Clavin said in a release, “and we are proud to work with Nassau County Police Department

in protecting our community.”
Hempstead Town Councilman Christopher Carini says enforcement of crime is a top priority for him, as he has formed quality of life task forces to go after graffiti, illegal signage and criminal establishments. However, Carini says leadership in Albany has to do their part in helping communities.
“We must repeal cashless bail and provide law enforcement with the tools they need,” Carini said in a release, “otherwise establishments like this one will continue to pop up.”
Nassau County Legislator Michael Giangregorio says he is grateful to work with the Nassau Police Department and town partners to put an end to illegal activity in the community.
“I remain committed to ensuring the safety and quality of life of residents,” Giangregoriosaid, “and will continue to work with my partners in law enforcement to deter crime and hold criminals accountable.”
Student earns state recognition in contest


Her fifth-grade social studies teacher at Mandalay Elementary School, Bridget Montario, encouraged her students to enter the competition, Emily recalled. Montario said that the contest would be an interesting activity for the students, because it gave them an opportunity to connect with the flag and work on their writing skills.
A day after the contest was announced, Emily had strep throat and stayed home from school. Most students might understandably avoid schoolwork on a sick day, but she spent part of the time writing the essay on the flag. She finished it in two hours.
“I just did it,” she said simply. “It doesn’t hurt to try.”
When passion is involved, she explained, her writing shows it, and the flag was a favorite subject of hers. According to Montario, Emily had shown interest in the flag’s history in class, and even dressed as Betsy Ross, who was credited with making the first American flag, for a “living wax museum” event, in which students dress as historical figures.
“I was proud that she had the courage to express what the flag meant to her, and to take the risk and the challenge of writing this essay,” Montario said of her student.
In her essay, Emily explained what the colors of the flag meant to her. White meant honesty, which reminded her of what teachers said throughout her education.
“Honesty is the best policy, so just be honest,” she said, recalling her teachers’ words. “Being honest is always better than lying.”
Red made Emily think of bravery, and having the courage to try.
“You don’t have to be the bravest, but always try to

be brave,” she said. “Just do your best.”
Finally, blue made her think of freedom and being your own person, and in her essay, Emily wrote about her uncles, who served in the military, as well as other people who enlisted.


“They were brave enough to go and fight for their country, and to get their freedom,” she said of her uncles, and the military.
Julie Rosslee, the Wantagh school district’s director of humanities, who also read Emily’s essay, said the district was proud of her.
“Emily’s essay was written from the heart,” Rosslee said, “and I think that’s what makes all the difference when students are very thoughtful with what they write that’s near and dear to them, as Emily’s was. She did a great job.”
As a winner of her local chapter, Dressler’s essay was submitted to the Daughters of the Revolution’s state competition. On Sept. 6, she was notified that she had been awarded an honorable mention.
“When a student is recognized by the state, it’s an amazing accomplishment, and that’s exactly what Emily did,” Rosslee said. “Getting honorable mention is a huge deal, because it’s not often that we have a student who qualifies at the state level to get something like that.”

Emily said felt proud about her experience, and encouraged other students to take a chance and take part in the organization’s essay contests in the future.
Montario said that the event presents students with a great opportunity to grow.
“I would like them to continue to practice their writing skills and take risks to enter these contests,” she said, “because you never know where it could take you.”

MARCIE IANNICO Hewlett Senior Soccer
A FIFTH-YEAR performer on the varsity pitch, Iannico enters the 2023 campaign in search of a third consecutive All-County award as she looks to help lead the Bulldogs into the playoffs. She started on the right foot, scoring twice Sept. 5 as Hewlett defeated Valley Stream North. Her second goal of the game was the 30th of her high school career. She had 12 goals as a sophomore and followed up with 13 tallies last season.
GAMES TO WATCH
Thursday, Sept. 21

Boys Soccer: East Meadow at Uniondale 5 p.m.
Boys Soccer: Oceanside at Freeport 5 p.m.
Friday, Sept. 22
Girls Soccer: MacArthur at Massapequa 5 p.m.
Football: Baldwin at Westbury 5 p.m.
Boys Soccer: V.S. South at Hewlett 5:30 p.m.
Football: Farmingdale at Freeport 6 p.m.
Football: Hicksville at Oceanside 6 p.m.
Football: Uniondale at Syosset 6:30 p.m.
Football: Bethpage at V.S. North 7 p.m.
Football: Garden City at MacArthur 7 p.m.
Saturday, Sept. 23
Boys Soccer: Wantagh at Calhoun 9 a.m.
Boys Soccer: Long Beach at Freeport 10 a.m.







Football: Lynbrook at Hewlett 2 p.m.
Football: Plainedge at Wantagh 2 p.m.
Football: Mineola at South Side 2 p.m.
Football: North Shore at V.S. South 2 p.m.
Football: West Hempstead at Malverne 2 p.m.
Football: Sewanhaka at Calhoun 2 p.m.
Football: Carey at Long Beach 2 p.m.
Football: East Meadow at Massapequa 2 p.m.
Nomimate a “Spotlight Athlete”

High School athletes to be featured on the Herald sports page must compete in a fall sport and earned an All-Conference award or higher last year. Please send the following information for consideration: Name, School, Grade, Sport and accomplishments to Sports@liherald.com.




Wantagh excited for a playoff run
By ANDREW COEN sports@liherald.comWhile the Wantagh girls’ soccer team is assured of a postseason spot competing in a new ability-based conference, the team has plenty of motivation to make a statement in the regular season.
The Warriors are striving for one of the top seeds in the Nassau County Class A playoffs a season removed from a close 1-0 setback to eventual Long Island Class A champion MacArthur in the quarterfinal round. Wantagh’s new league, Conference A/B 1, features Plainedge, North Shore, Seaford, Lynbrook and Friends Academy.
“Since we’re in the top conference, we’re fighting for seeding for the postseason so every game that’s a conference game means something,” said 13-year Wantagh head coach James Polo. “We want to be a top four school in the conference and let the playoffs dictate themselves from there.”
Wantagh suffered a blow before the season with senior defenders Isabella Teresky and Grace Fulton both suffering ACL injuries in the spring. Polo said he is hopeful that Teresky, who was a captain last season, can make it back for the end of the season depending on her recovery.
With Teresky and Fulton both out, the defense will rely more on senior Sienna Diglio at outside left back and sophomore Kaitlyn Baudo at stopper.The backline also features contributions from seniors Isabelle Witte and Bridhid Smith along with junior Riley Forthofer.
Senior goalie Isabella Astazia is starting her fourth season in net and recorded six saves in a season-opening 1-0 win at Lynbrook on Sept. 12. She’s backed up by younger sister sophomore Gabriella Astazia.

Offensively, the Warriors are led by junior midfielder Juliana Cerasi, a versatile player who recently committed to play women’s lacrosse at James Madison University. Cerasi tallied a key goal in Wantagh’s 2-1 second round playoff win against Bethpage last year and converted a free kick from 30 yards away to tie the

score in a 1-1 draw with Long Beach last Thursday.
Sophomore outside midfielder Shannon Udell also brings experience to the offensive atack as a third-year varsity starter. The offense features a number of players rotating forward and midfield early in the season including junior Gianna Paccione, who scored the lone goal in the Lynbrook victory off a cross from Udell with two seconds left in the first half.
Wantagh travels to Garden City Thursday for a 5 p.m. kickoff before host-
ing Friends Academy Saturday at 10 a.m. in the first of four straight home matches. The Warriors will square off at home against neighborhood rival Seaford Wednesday, Plainedge on Oct. 4 and Lynbrook on Oct. 6 with all matches beginning at 5 p.m.
“It’s early in the session and we’re growing and we are nowhere near the team that we can be,” Polo said. “This next week will be our test for the season to see where we’re at as we play some pretty good competition and we will build off of that.”
THE WEEKLY LIST:
GET MOVING WITH LONG ISLAND’S ALL-STARS IN SPORTS
BEST SPORTSBICYCLE STORE: Brands Cycle and Fitness
1966 Wantagh Ave,Wantagh (800) 649-3739
brandscycle.com


Brands Cycle & Fitness was voted one of the top six bike stores in the country by Bicycling Magazine. Their staff of 60 to 110 employees (seasonally) wants to make your cycling and home ftness experiences as convenient and enjoyable as possible. Shop online or in-store seven days a week. For more than 50 years, they’ve been proud to be your resource for all things cycling.
BEST BOXING CENTER:
Fit Theorem
560 Commack Rd, Deer Park (631) 596-5333
fttheorem.com
At Fit Theorem, their mission is to defeat mediocrity, ignite human potential, and transform lives: mind, body, spirit. With The FITT Experience, you take on the FITT Elements: Fighter, HIIT, Strength and Flow. There are also group ftness sessions as well. The Fighter element incorporates kickboxing combinations with a standing heavy bag. Kickboxing helps develop coordination between the lower body and upper body through rotational patterns, balance, strength, and speed.
BEST PERSONAL TRAINING FACILITY: Personal Training Institute of Rockville Centre


BEST PERSONAL TRAINER:
Rosie Santana and Dylan McManus
60 N. Park Avenue, Rockville Centre (516) 823-3005
ptirockvillecentre.com
Personal Training Institute™ is a unique organization offering customized one-on-one ftness and nutrition programs to individuals looking to improve their overall health and general lifestyle. Relying on a combination of custom-tailored strength training workout sessions, cardio training, nutrition counseling, motivation techniques and best in the business exercise equipment, their programs offered great success to participants from frst time exercisers to advanced athletes.
BEST GYM & FITNESS CENTER: Hollywood Health Club
265 E Park Ave, Long Beach (516) 348-6377
hollywoodhealthclub.com
Hollywood Health Club coaches have a wide range of expertise gained from the proprietary Active Life continuing educational programs. They are equipped to work with members who are just starting their ftness journey, post operative and rehabilitation needs and athletes at all levels. Each program begins with a detailed functional assessment. Their team works to ensure each session is challenging, engaging, and delivers results. These programs, combined with the State of the Art Equipment and Functional Training Facilities, ensure members reach their ftness goals.
BEST CROSSFIT GYM: CrossFit Nine7
97 E Shore Rd, Manhasset (516) 466-4146
crossftnine7.com
CrossFit is a strength & conditioning based ftness program. It combines the most effective aspects of weightlifting, gymnastics & high intensity cardio. There is no other exercise program that has as much diversity in its variables. Each workout is individualized. You will be challenged differently daily and work to your fullest potential.
BEST ICE SKATING RINK: Grant Park
1625 Broadway, Hewlett (516) 571-7821
nassaucountyny.gov
Grant Park, part of the Nassau County Park system since 1955, is located in the southwest part of the county, offering a complete recreational and sports complex on 35 acres in Hewlett, Long Island. Outdoor ice rinks available for public skating sessions from November to March.
BEST YOGA: Bikram Yoga
365 E Park Ave, Long Beach (516) 442-3261
bikramyogalbny.com
Bikram Yoga - Long Beach is more than just a yoga studio; they are a true community — one big extended family who greets you with open arms and lots of love. An open mind and a willingness to sweat are the only requirements. Just show up as you are. All of the instructors certifed by the Original Hot Yoga Association/Bikram and have undergone rigorous inperson training (350+ hours). Their yoga classes are suitable for beginners and advanced practitioners alike -- all bodies, all levels, all people welcome.
BEST PILATES: Fit4Life Studios, Inc.




361-B Atlantic Ave, Freeport (516) 208-6726
ft4lifestudios.com
Fit4Life Studios, Inc. (FFLS) is a full-service personal ftness studio in Nassau County. From private and semiprivate Pilates and Personal Training sessions, Yoga, Pilates Mat, Zumba, Step Aerobics, and Kickboxing classes. Their programs are customized to meet each person’s needs and ftness level and are accompanied by comprehensive nutritional guidelines to improve ftness performance or achieve weight loss.
Hundreds attend East Meadow Senior Health Expo


The East Meadow Beth-El Jewish Center hosted the Herald’s Senior Health & Beyond Expo on Sept. 7, part of the company’s 2023 Expo series.
This community-favorite event featured more than 30 businesses and service providers sharing their expertise with Long Island residents. HearingLife conducted free hearing examinations, and HealthFirst provided music under a tent.



Amy Amato, executive director of corporate relations and events at Herald Community Newspapers and RichnerLive, expressed gratitude for what she described as a fantastic turnout and beautiful day. Attendees enjoyed panel discussions led by Lori Berger, the Heralds’ sales director, who cracked a few jokes.
Panelists included Katherine Reilly from CenterLight Health System, Christopher Demers of Aetna, Jill Wasser from the New York State Department of Public Service, and Pablo Rendon from Parker Jewish Institute for Health Care & Rehabilitation.
Guests received goody bags from Otsuka filled with event sections, keepsakes, and valuable take-home materials. Raffle prizes included tickets to “The Play that Goes Wrong,” gift certificates and Mary Kay gift baskets.
The Expo’s success was made possible by sponsors Gold and Gift Bag Sponsor Otsuka, as well as Silver Sponsors HearingLife, Atena, CenterLight Health System, Parker Jewish Health Care and Rehabilitation, Long Beach Nursing and Rehabilitation Center, and New York State Department of Public Service.


Both guests and vendors eagerly anticipate the next expo on Monday, Oct. 16, at The Mansion at Glen Cove, 200 Dosoris Lane, in Glen Cove. Register at RichnerLive.com/ seniorexpo.
–Alexa AnderwkavichDems urge Blakeman to deliver tax relief




As renting, utilities, and grocery costs rise not just all across the country, but also here at home, Democrats inside the Nassau County Legislature are urging County Executive Bruce Blakeman to deliver tax relief ahead of the budget proposal deadline last week.
Republicans, however, say that tax relief has already come — by eliminating proposed tax increases under Democrats.
They’ve cited a number of proposed cost increases affecting many locally, like Liberty Utilities wanting to hike rates by nearly 35 percent. The county’s Rent Guidelines Board voting to increase rents by up to 2 percent, excluding only the Village of Hempstead. And ongoing rising food prices — which were up nearly 5 percent over last year, according to the U.S. Department of Agriculture.
The Democrats wanted Blakeman to deliver $128 million of tax relief, stemming from a 2021 campaign pledge from Blakeman promising to deliver property tax cuts “by over $128 million in a single year.”


Blakeman did not respond to the Herald’s requests for comment.
A $70-million tax cut included in the 2022 county budget, passed during the administration of Blakeman’s Demo -



cratic predecessor, Laura Curran administration, received unanimous legislative support, the Democratic legislators said during a news conference last week.
“Now is the time — as good students, as elected leaders — to come together,” County Legislator Siela Bynoe said.

“The entire legislature and this administration: Provide a tax break.”

While tax cuts were delivered between 2018 and 2022, Democrats say last year’s budget passed under Blake -
man included no tax cut.

But that’s not true, Republicans said. Richard Nicolello, the legislature’s GOP presiding officer, added his body eliminated tax increases planned under Curran between 2023 and 2025. He disputes the claim last year’s budget delivered no tax cuts, and said that relief came from cutting out a planned $35 million tax increase proposed by Democrats while Curran was still in office.
Even if that were the case, Democrats don’t feel that is enough.
“At a time when the costs for various commodities are increasing across the board,” Bynoe said, “this budget provides us with an opportunity to embrace the principles of good government and deliver relief to taxpayers in a meaningful and impactful way.”
Projections show that the county is on track to end fiscal 2023 with a significant surplus. Giving that surplus back to taxpayers — including a “modest portion” of county reserves — would make that relief possible, Democrats said.
Monthly reports from the county’s budget management office indicates that another $100 million could be added to various reserves this year.


Democrats credited Curran’s administration with providing a “fiscally solvent” government that “eased the burden” on Blakeman.


“Unfortunately, because of poor government policies, we have two Nassau counties,” County Legislator Carrié Solages said.
“One Nassau County for the very rich, headed by Bruce Blakeman. And then the Nassau County in which everyone else is there. As a result, his budget reflects that.”
Everyday residents of Nassau need this relief, Bynoe said.
“We need a cut,” said the Uniondale representative. “We need a reduction. And we need it now. Families are suffering, now. They need the help, now.”
Courtesy Legislative MajorityFun times at Rosh Hashana street fair
The Chabad Hebrew School of MerrickBellmore-Wantagh made learning about the high holidays fun this year, with a Rosh Hashana Street Fair.
A new year of Hebrew school began last week for students on Sept. 13, and before heading to class, students enrolled in the program were able to enjoy several outdoor activities, that were fun and immersive, and taught them about the upcoming holiday.


Rosh Hashana is the Jewish new year, a two-day observance that begins on the first day of the seventh month of the Hebrew calendar. Customs include sounding a shofar — a hollowed-out ram’s horn — attending synagogue services with special liturgy for the holiday and eating symbolic foods.

Students in the Chabad Hebrew School were able to enjoy many fun activities during the street fair. They learned how to make challah bread and pomegranate salsa, designed Shana Tovah, or Happy New Year cards, and took home a Rosh Hashana box, with sweet treats to usher in a “sweet” new year. They were also able to collect sweet treats in various spots throughout the fair.
Rosh Hashana fell on Sept. 16 and 17 this year. The holiday is followed by Yom Kippur, the holiest day of the year in Judaism, on Sept. 25.
On Yom Kippur, for younger members of the Chabad, there will be services at 10:45 a.m. for ages 1 to 4, and at 12 p.m. for ages 5 and older. There is no charge for the services, but pre-registration is required.
To learn more about upcoming services and events through the Chabad, and to register for children’s services related to the high holidays, visit ChabadJewishLife.org.
–Jordan ValloneAidan Licht, 7, and Jason Licht, 9, learned some stpes to make challah bread.


Hoping to end Alzheimer’s, step by step
rate teams and sponsors.
“We have companies that are fundraising for all the different walks in the nation,” Hardekopf said. “They commit to raising a certain amount of money and become a national team.”
Educational programs accompany corporate sponsorships, she said. For financial companies, like Edward Jones, one of the Alzheimer’s Association’s national presenting sponsors, these programs are extremely important.

“A lot of these corporate teams will allow us to come in and do these education programs, like communication strategies or knowing the 10 signs,” she explained. “It’s great for the financial industry. People that work in finance really need to know the signs, because when their clients come in and they’re kind of making different requests that aren’t sound decisions, they can start to question whether they need a financial proxy.”
Registration and check-in on the day of the walk opens at 9 a.m. and at 10, Hardekopf said. There’s a promise garden opening ceremony, where people hold flowers to represent why they’re walking.
“People that lost someone will carry a purple flower — people that are caregivers will carry a yellow one,” she said. “Blue means you have the disease, and orange is you’re there because you wish for a world without Alzheimer’s. We have a representative of each other flower speak briefly on why they hold that flower. The first time I was up on stage — I did not expect it. It’s an extremely emotional ceremony. It’s a really special day for a lot of families.”
Nancy Chandler, chair of the Alzheimer’s Association Long Island chapter board of directors, said the walk is “supportive, emotional and uplifting.”

“I cry every year at the promise garden ceremony,”
Chandler said. “When you look at the seas of flowers and see all the people affected, it is a very uplifting and emotional moment.”
“This disease takes so much out of a family,” Valerie Giresi, a walk participant and volunteer, said, “and it is nice to walk together to show we are all together in this fight.”
D’Accordo said people should support the cause of the Alzheimer’s Association, so “nobody has to go through this.”
“It’s devastating on the caretakers,” he said. “That’s not to dismiss what the family goes through, what the
patient goes through. I watched my father’s dignity be stripped away — his independence, and he knew it. He really fought and he did a valiant job. But to watch people not remember simple things, not know what day it is, what time it is, or who their family members are, it’s really difficult. Why should someone contribute? To hopefully put an end to this.”
About 300 participants and 117 teams have registered for the East Meadow walk. The association said it hopes to raise $300,000, and is about 40 percent of the way there. For more information on the association and how to participate in the walk, visit Act.ALZ.org/Nassau.
gsnc.org/join

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Nassau remembers those taken on 9/11


It’s been 22 years since our world changed forever when our nation was attacked. But for so many like Susan Hutchins, it still feels like Sept. 11, 2001 — the day she lost her son, West Hempstead’s Kevin Nathaniel Colbert, in the South Tower of the World Trade Center.
“Kevin was an amazing brother, nephew, godson, cousin and friend,” Hutchins told the crowd that gathered at Eisenhower Park’s Harry Chapin Lakeside Theatre for Nassau County’s 9/11 Remembrance Ceremony.


“Today is so unsettling. And, quite frankly, as emotionally painful as it was that day. Aug. 26 was my son’s 46th birthday. That last time I saw him, he was 25. In the blink of an eye, another day. Another week. Another month. Another year. It’s all passed. It’s 2023, and most people here are stuck in 2001.”
Nassau County Executive Bruce Blakeman put together the ceremony and musical tribute, which moved forward despite the threat of thunderstorms last week — which didn’t arrive until the ceremony was over. While the primary focus was remembering each of the 349 people from Nassau County who died as a result of 9/11, Blakeman also wanted Monday’s ceremony to be inspirational.

To help, he brought in internationally renowned classical singer Christopher Macchio, to perform everything from “Ave Maria” to Leonard Cohen’s “Hallelujah.”
“Remember them,” Blakeman said of those who were lost, including his own nephew, Thomas Jurgens. “Remember and comfort their families. And know, today, we stand together as a united county, regardless of race, religion, ethnicity, political party. Today, we are one — just as America was on Sept. 12, 2001, when our nation came together to fight terrorism.”
While many of the names read, like Colbert, worked in the World Trade Center towers, many more were first responders from the New York City Fire Department and the New York Police Department among others, trying to rescue as many people as they could.
“Remember those who made the supreme sacrifice,” Blakeman said. “It was first responders running in to save people’s lives. And also the time to realize that innocent people just going to work that day, minding their own business, were murdered by terrorists. We will never forget them, and we will never, ever stop comforting those families who lost their loved ones on that day.”
Not far from the ceremony stands two stainless steel towers set inside a fountain remember all who were lost in the World Trade Center. Two steel girders recovered from the twin towers site were added to the monument in 2021.
A memorial wall there bears the names of those lost. And next to Eisenhower Park’s Veterans Memorial is a separate memorial site featuring a red granite monument honoring county firefighters who died from illnesses because of their attempts to rescue people in the days following the terrorist attacks.
“Don’t take anyone for granted,” Hutchins said. “I don’t know if we have one life, or many lives. I’m not even sure if there’s life after death. What I do know is all the time with family and friends is important before they are gone, and you are gone.”
Additional reporting by Rachele Terranova
STEPPING OUT
Through the decades
Hofstra Museum turns60
By Karen BloomHofstra University Museum of Art’s many treasures are grand in scope and scale. It’s been a proud transformation for the museum, which began with a single gallery space, constructed in 1963. Decades later, it’s among the region’s leading arts institutions.
“Hofstra Museum is the only nationally accredited public facing (university) museum on Long Island,” says Alexandra Giordano, the museum’s new director.









































Martin Sexton
Take a musical cross country trip with Martin Sexton, whose latest album Mix Tape of the Open Road blazing through all territories of style. Critics liken it to a charm bracelet of 12 gems all strung together with the golden thread of what Rolling Stone calls his ‘soul-marinated voice.’ Growing up in Syracuse, uninterested in the music of the day, Sexton fueled his dreams with the timeless sounds of classic rock ’n’ roll. As he discovered the dusty old vinyl left in the basement by one of his big brothers, his musical fire was lit. He has infiltrated many musical worlds, performing at concerts ranging from pop (collaborating with John Mayer) to the Jam scene to classic rock (collaborating with Peter Frampton); from the Newport Folk Fest to Bonnaroo to New Orleans Jazz Fest to Carnegie Hall. Still fiercely independent, he’s influenced a generation of contemporary artists.
STEPPING
The museum reaches into its vast collection once again to open its fall exhibit season with “New Perspectives: The Museum of Art at 60.” It’s a sampling of the more than 5,200 works of art in the permanent collection, which date from 1500 B.C.E. to the 21st century. Painting, prints, drawings, photographs and sculpture — with an emphasis on American and European art — are all here. African, Asian, Melanesian, and Central and South American artifacts add to the strength of the collection.

Creative advocacy

“We like to think of ourselves as a learning lab for the campus, as well as hub for community enrichment and education,” Giordano says. That educational component also serves as foundation for arts education for students from pre-K through high school.
It’s all in keeping with the museum’s mission to facilitate rich and varied cultural and artistic explorations in an atmosphere promoting an open exchange of ideas. That’s certainly what this exhibit is all about.
By Karen BloomNew Perspectives is just that: a view of the museum’s collections through “new” eyes. Actually a showcase of 10 “mini exhibitions,” curated by what may seem unlikely individuals.
“We invited campus and community members to bring us a new perspective and point of view. It’s an interdisciplinary approach that involved alumni, students, staff, administrative leadership and others,” Giordano says. “We have created a place where art intersects with the community.”
WHERE WHEN
• Now through Dec. 15
anniversary,” she shares.




Saturday, Sept. 23, 8 p.m. $49, $44, $39. Jeanne Rimsky Theater at Landmark on Main Street, 232 Main St., Port Washington. (516) 767-6444 or LandmarkOnMainStreet.org.
• Emily Lowe Gallery, behind Emily Lowe Hall, Hofstra University’s South Campus
• Saturday and Sunday, noon-4 p.m.; Tuesday through Friday, 11 a.m.-4 p.m.
• Information available at Hofstra.edu/museum, or call (516) 463-5672
• Emily Lowe Hall Gallery, South Campus, Hempstead. For information and to RSVP, call (516) 463-5672, or visit Hofstra.edu/museum
“The experience was truly remarkable as the artworks I chose resonated with my soul on a profound level. Each piece exuded a powerful feminine energy that both motivated and inspired me, leaving an indelible mark on my heart and reaffirming the importance of celebrating art and culture in our academic community.”
Among her selections: The Dowayo peoples’ Namji Fertility Doll and George Gach’s sculpture, Maternity.


“When We All Stand,” Hofstra University Museum of Art’s new exhibition, examines the collective power of the arts in society.


Curated by Alexandra Giordano — the museum’s assistant director of exhibition and collection — the exhibit underscores artists’ civic responsibility and influence.
These “guest curators” reviewed the collection database, examined works in collection storage, and then made their selections. Their entries, of course, vary in style and content, depending upon their interests and focus.
Other highlights include Benny Andrews’ collage “Chasty,” selected by Margarita Lopez, a recent alumna, and Dong Kingman’s “Harlem Girl,” another pick by Darling.
Pat McGann is quickly rising as one of the sharpest stand-ups on the comedy scene. A relative latecomer to comedy, he began doing standup at 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, McGann’s 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 arenas, including four soldout shows at Madison Square Garden. McGann’s relatively short, but impressive resume, includes Montreal’s famed Just For Laughs Festival, Gilda’s LaughFest, The Great American Comedy Festival, and more. McGann still calls Chicago home.
Assemblywoman Taylor Darling is among those invited to participate.
“I’m deeply honored to be a part of Hofstra Museum 60th
“It highlights the vital role that artists have in activating democratic values that promise equality and freedom, encouraging civic engagement, and cultivating unity,” Giordano says. “Artists often lead the charge and expose truths that may otherwise be ignored. The artists in this exhibition take a stand and call out injustices through their art and activism on issues such as immigration, gender, reproductive rights, mass incarceration, voting rights, racial bias, gun violence, and promises unfulfilled. They all combine the making of art with public service that has a grassroots approach in the hope of mobilizing their communities and the nation to ignite movement, create awareness, and inspire others to stand with them.”
This exhibit, which runs through July 28, is in conjunction with Hofstra’s 13th presidential conference on the Barack Obama presidency coming up in April.

“We were interested in the idea that the artist has a civic responsibility,” says


“Their use of materials, oil on canvas, really captures their subjects,” Giordano adds. “Both artists complement each other well.”
As always, public programming enhances the exhibit experience. Upcoming events include a conversation with the curators, Oct. 4, at 6 p.m. The guest curators will discuss their selections and experiences, offering insight into this collaborative exhibition. Attendees will hear how they viewed the collection from their individual outlooks. Light refreshments will be available.
‘Easy come, easy go’ Queen-mania rocks on with Killer Queen’s homage to Freddie Mercury and his bandmates. Formed in the United Kingdom in 1993, Killer Queen played their first public shows at London University where Queen itself had its first shows 21 years earlier. Fronted by Patrick Myers, critics have described Myers’ resemblance to Mercury as ‘spooky;’ his uncanny likeness was further proven when he recorded a No. 1 hit single singing as Freddie Mercury on Fat Boy Slim’s record ‘The Real Life.’ Their expert musicianship, extraordinary energy, and accurate portrayal of beloved band has rightfully earned them the title of Queen Royalty. Combined with Myers’ powerful three-anda-half octave tenor range, expert musicianship and dynamic stage presence, Killer Queen continues to captivate audiences the world over.

Saturday, Sept. 23, 8 p.m. $49.50, $39.50, $35, $24.50. The Paramount, 370 New York Ave., Huntington. (800) 745-3000 or Ticketmaster.com or ParamountNY. com.
Saturday, Feb. 11, 8 p.m. $40, $35, $30, $25. The Paramount, 370 New York Ave., Huntington. (800) 745-3000 or Ticketmaster.com or ParamountNY.com.

Can art change the world? It’s a question that’s been at the focus of our collective culture for centuries. Now as society navigates the complexities of modern life, art as a path for social change is at the forefront of artistic expression.Top: Benny Andrews’ Chasty, 1961, is a mixed media, oil and collage on canvas, represents a playful portrait. A gift to the museum by Dr. and Mrs. Joseph Tucker. Bottom: Dong Kingman’s Harlem Girl, Harlem Girl, undated oil and collage on masonite, captures the spirit and resilience of an African American woman in an urban environment. A gift to the museum by Dr. Alfred Brotman.
Indie icon and National Symphony Orchestra Artistic Advisor Ben Folds visits The Paramount, on the heels of his recently released What Matters Most, Monday, Oct. 2, 8 p.m. Folds says his first full-length studio album in eight year is his most “true” to date. “There’s a lifetime of craft and experience all focused into this one record,” explains Folds.

“Sonically, lyrically, emotionally, I don’t think it’s an album I could have made at any other point in my career.” One of the major music influencers of our generation, Folds’ body of genre-bending music includes a string of classic albums with Ben Folds Five and a glorious mix of collaborations and special projects. Folds is known for hits like “You Don’t Know Me”, “Way to Normal” and “Landed” but as lead singer of the famous Ben Folds Five he spent much of the ‘90s generating his success with the band. After releasing no less than six solo albums, Folds really is his own entity, with a huge number of hit songs under his belt, fans are loyal to his unique sound and continue to follow him into his 4th decade of music. Ben has worked with handfuls of notable artists through the years, both collaborating with and writing for, including Nick Hornby, Ymusic and William Shatner, including performing with some of the world’s great symphony orchestras. He has also managed to fit in writing music for hit films, proving time and again that he’s a man of many talents. he takes success in his stride and continues to be the humble musician he was been for so many decades. A self-confessed enigma, he prefers to stay out of the limelight except when touring, but can easily claim credit for some of music’s most unlikely trends. $99.50 $79.50, $69.50, $59.50, $39.50. The Paramount, 370 New York Ave., Huntington. (800) 745-3000 or Ticketmaster.com or ParamountNY.com.









On exhibit




View the landmark exhibition “Modigliani and the Modern Portrait,” at Nassau County Museum of Art. Devoted to the way that Modigliani powerfully re-defined the art of portraiture, the show includes his masterworks along with paintings and drawings by his Parisian contemporaries (Picasso, van Dongen, Laurencin). Modigliani’s enduring influence on artists even in our own time is shown in a selection of Contemporary paintings by such important figures as David Hockney, Eric Fischl, Elizabeth Peyton and others. The exhibition is being curated by Dr. Kenneth Wayne, founder of The Modigliani Project, which authenticates paintings and drawings (two of the works in the show have been recently approved by the committee). Through Nov. 5. Nassau County Museum of Art, 1 Museum Dr., Roslyn Harbor. (516) 484-9337 or NassauMuseum.org.
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Legends of Hip-Hop concert
















In celebration of the 50th anniversary of Hip-Hop, Mayor Waylyn Hobbs Jr. and The Village of Hempstead host a free concert featuring Hip-Hop legends The Sugar Hill Gang, Rob Base, Hempstead native A+ and Keith Murray, Friday, Sept. 29, 6 p.m., at Denton Green. The concert in Hempstead, one of the bedrocks of early and current Hip-Hop, ncludes vendors, food and activities. Dressing in early Hip Hop-era attire encouraged. 99 James A. Garner Way, across from Village Hall, Hempstead.





Leaf Peepers












Celebrate fall and all the colors of the season with the family at Long Island Children’s Museum, Saturday, Sept. 23, 12-2 p.m. Use your imagination to make animal art out of colorful leaf shapes, focusing on the seasonal shades of vibrant yellow, deep purple, and fiery orange, at the dropin program. Suitable for ages 3 and up. Long Island Children’s Museum, Museum Row, Garden City. (516) 224-5800 or LICM.org





































































Art classes

Nassau County Museum of Art welcomes those interested in improving their art skills or those who simply want to explore their creativity to participate in one of their many stimulating classes. The fall schedule includes Watercolor Florals: Beginner to intermediate levels (adults and teens 16+), Thursdays, 9:30 a.m.-noon, Nov. 2-Dec. 14.
$300, $270 members. Nassau County Museum of Art, 1 Museum Dr., Roslyn Harbor. For information and to register visit NassauMuseum.org or call (516) 484-9338.

Community Yizkor Service
Congregation Beth Tikvah welcomes everyone to a Community Yizkor Service, free and open to all, Monday, Sept. 25, at 2 p.m. Rabbi Moshe P. Weisblum will lead the service in the Sanctuary. Congregation Beth Tikvah is located near the SeafordOyster Bay Expressway, at 3710 Woodbine Ave., in Wantagh. To RSVP, call the office at (516) 785-2445.

Art talk

Grab your lunch and join Nassau County Museum of Art Docent Riva Ettus for her popular “Brown Bag Lecture,” now back on-site at Nassau County Museum of Art, Thursday, Oct. 19 , 1 p.m. Enjoy an in-depth presentation on the current exhibition “Modigliani and the Modern Portrait.”
Participants are invited to ask questions at the end of the program and to join the 2 p.m. public tour of the exhibit. 1 Museum Dr., Roslyn Harbor. (516) 484-9337 or NassauMuseum.org.
Game time
Enjoy Mah Jongg and card games at Congregation Beth Tikvah, every Thursday, noon-4 p.m. (doors open 11:30 a.m.). Open to women and men. Come alone or bring friends, also bring sets and cards. Lessons are available. $5 per person. 3710 Woodbine Ave. Contact Beth Tikvah office at (516) 785-2445.

Having an event?






An inspired concert
Conductor-composer Steven Sametz directs The Princeton Singers in “Inspirations,” a program of diverse musical selections, Adelphi’s Performing Arts Center stage, Saturday, Sept. 30 , 4 p.m. They have captivated audiences and listeners for 40 years through their versatile musicianship. The ensemble is noted for their mastery of works from Bach to Schoenberg, with forays into unexplored and exciting realms such as Aboriginal and Native American ritual music, Igbe chanting, and ArabAndalusian muwashahat. Inspirations is a look at how contemporary composers take their inspiration from chant, carnival songs, and spirituals, including works by Josquin des Prez, Johann Sebastian Bach, Johannes Brahms, Steven Sametz, and Adelphi faculty member Sidney Boquire. $35. Adelphi University Performing Arts Center, 1 South Ave., Garden City. (516) 877-4000 or Adelphi.edu/pac.
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.























Westbury House Tour
For many years visitors to Westbury House at Old Westbury Gardens asked what was beyond the first floor corridor. Now beyond the door and discover “secrets of the service wing,” during a 60-minute guided tour, Friday, Sept. 22, noon-1 p.m.; Sunday, Sept. 24, 1:302:30 p.m. and 3:30-4:30 p.m.; Monday, Sept. 25, noon-1 p.m.; Wednesday and Thursday, Sept. 27-28, noon-1 p.m. Be introduced to the intensive labor required to create the lifestyle experienced by the Phipps family and their guests; tour the many rooms that were “behind the scenes” to create the formal dining experiences of early 20th century. Go along the corridors to the butler’s pantry and silver cleaning room then descend the 17 steps to the kitchen, scullery, and wine storage rooms located on the ground floor. Reservations required. 71 Old Westbury Rd., Old Westbury. For information contact (516) 333-0048 or visit OldWestburyGardens.org.

Breastfeeding Support Group
Mercy Hospital offers a peer to peer meeting for breastfeeding support and resources, facilitated by a certified breastfeeding counselor, every Thursday, 10:30 a.m.–11:30 a.m. Bring your baby (from newborn to 1 year) to the informal group setting. All new moms are welcome, regardless of delivering hospital. Registration required. Call breastfeeding counselor, Gabriella Gennaro, at (516) 705-2434 to secure you and your baby’s spot. Mercy Hospital, St. Anne’s Building, 1000 North Village Ave., Rockville Centre. For information visit CHSLI.org.
Harvest Fair
Seaford Historical Society hosts its annual Harvest Fair, Sunday, Sept. 24, 10 a.m.- 4 p.m. With entertainment, food, vendors, raffles and fun for all ages. Proceeds support the museum, which was built in 1893. 3890 Waverly Ave.
Farmer’s market
Pick up seasonal fruits and vegetables at the Seaford Farmer’s Market, on Saturdays, through Nov. 18, from 7 a.m. to noon. Railroad Street, east

Advocates rallies for more ‘red flag’ action
By PARKER SCHUG pschug@liherald.com



They don’t want new legislation — they’re simply want enforcement.
Last week, Mom’s Demand Action for Gun Sense in America, victims of gun violence and local gun control advocates gathered on the north lawn of the Nassau County Supreme court to rally for just that enforcement when it comes to the state’s “red flag” law.

The “red flag” law — or the “extreme risk protection order” law — was established in 2019 in an attempt to prevent guns from falling into the hands of someone posing a threat to themselves or others. It followed nationwide mass shootings, acts of domestic violence, and suicides by gun.
“These laws provide space and time between the guns and gun owners if they are thinking of harming themselves or somebody else,” said Jana Nesbitt Gale, deputy chapter lead and co-local group lead of Long Island Mom’s Demand Action organization. “It’s not about taking the gun away forever. It’s just about providing a temporary cooling off period for the safety of the person in question.”
Since the law’s fruition, Gov. Kathy Hochul has enhanced the legislation, requiring state police to file an red flag protection order when they deem it necessary, and by adding health care practitioners who have seen someone as a patient within six months to the list of those who can file for such orders. Hochul has pushed police training councils to create and teach policy and procedure on when a red flag protective order petition should be used.
Others eligible to file a protective order petition include district attorneys, school officials, and even those who might live with someone who might be intending harm.


According to Seth Koslow — a Democrat running against Joseph Baker for the Nassau County Legislature — 35 protective order petitions were issued in the county over the course of a recent year. During that same time, however, neighboring Suffolk County filed more than 1,500.
Many red flag protective order petitions in Suffolk came from 911 calls, Koslow added, where someone threatened to hurt themselves.
“We need more rigorous police use of the existing ‘red flag’ law,” Koslow said. “Taking this step will help (keep) our children safe from self-harm, and help us sleep better at night.”

Baker — who seeks to represent Freeport, Merrick and Bellmore, among other communities — is not believed to have publicly spoken out on his position of “red flag” laws.
Linda Beigel Schulman — mother of Scott Beigel, a teacher murdered in the 2014 Parkland, Florida high
Linda Beigel Schulman shares the story of her son, Scott, who lost his life to gun violence, at a Nassau rally advocating for improved enforcement of ‘red flag’ laws — intended to prevent weapons from falling into the hands of someone who poses a threat to themselves, or others.
school shooting — shared that if a “red flag” law had been in place in that state sooner, her son might be alive right now.
If Republican candidates believe mental health issues cause gun violence, she added, they should use the “red flag” law to its fullest extent.
“The proper enforcement of ‘red flag’ laws means people like me — like you, your family, your friends, your coworkers — will not have to endure what I do each day,” Beigel Schulman said. “You’ll never have to live with a scar that never heals. Pain that never goes away.”
Deanna Drury shared her family’s experience with suicide, losing her uncle to suicide by a gun, and nearly losing her mother.
“I’m grateful on her bad day,” Drury said, “she didn’t have access to a gun.”
“Removing access to firearms is the quickest and easiest intervention. We don’t have to live like this, and we don’t have to die like this.”

















WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 27
6:00-9:00PM
The Heritage Club at Bethpage 99 Quaker Meeting House Road Farmingdale, New York
MARC S. ADLER, MD
TO PURCHASE TICKETS VISIT richnerlive.com/2023healthcare
A portion of ticket sales proceeds will be donated to a local charity. For more information or to sponsor this event, contact Amy Amato
Executive Director, Corporate Relations and Events at aamato@richnerlive.com or 516.569.4000 x224
MEET THE 2023 AWARD WINNERS*
Senior Vice President and Chief of Hospital Operations
Long Island Community Hospital
KIMON BEKELIS, MD
Chairman
Neurointerventional Services at Catholic Health

Director
Stroke and Brain Aneurysm Center of Long Island

JOSEPH BENDEN LMSW, LNHA
Administrator
The Five Towns Premier Rehabilitation and Nursing Center

FLORA BIENSTOCK
Chief Clinical Offcer
New Horizon Counseling Center

JORDAN BRODSKY, MD

Medical Doctor & Rheumatologist
Rheumatology Consultants

MATTHEW J. BRUDERMAN
Chairman, Board of Directors
Nassau University Medical Center
TARA BUONOCORE-RUT
President & CEO
CenterLight Health System
ANN CELLA, MA, MED, RN, NEA-BC
Chief Nursing Offcer
St. Francis Hospital & Heart Center
CRISTINA CELLUCCI, MSN, RN, SAFE
Director of Nursing, Emergency Department
Mount Sinai South Nassau
STACEY CONKLIN, MSN, RN-BC, MHCDS, NE-BC
Senior Vice President & Chief Nursing Offcer
Mount Sinai South Nassau
NOVLET DAVIS, DNP, ANP-C
Nurse Practitioner
St. Francis Hospital & Heart Center
KRISTEN DESIDERI
Licensed Practical Nurse
Glengariff Rehabilitation and Healthcare Center
DANIEL DIAZ, C.P.O.
ABC Certifed Prosthetist, Orthotist
Complete Orthopedic Services, Inc.
MARK C. DRAKOS, MD
Medical Director Hospital For Special Surgery
ADINA GELFAND-EREZ R-PAC
CEO
Bleu Glove Concierge
CAROL GOMES, MS, FACHE, CPHQ
CEO, Stony Brook University Hospital
Stony Brook Medicine
JAY ITZKOWITZ, MD, MBA, FACEP
Chair of Department of Emergency Medicine
Mount Sinai South Nassau
LINDA JACOBS, MD
Pediatrician
Concierge Pediatric Practice
JONATHAN JASSEY, DO FAAP
Founding Pediatrician
Concierge Pediatric Practice
FELICIA KASTOW
Director of Marketing & Operations


Pure Mammography
CHRISTINE L. KIPPLEY, RN
VP Patient Care Services & Chief Nursing Offcer
Peconic Bay Medical Center Northwell
ALEXANDER M. KOTLYAR, MD, FACOG
Reproductive Endocrinologist

Genesis Fertility and Reproductive Medicine

KEN LONG
Senior Vice President, Administration & Chief Clinical Integration Offcer
Mount Sinai South Nassau
JEFFREY MCQUEEN M.B.A., L.C.D.C.
Executive Director
Mental Health Association of Nassau County


COLLEEN MERLO
CEO
Association for Mental Health and Wellness
EUNICE E. PARK, MD, MPH
Dual-board certifed Facial Plastic & Reconstructive Surgeon



Founder
AIREM Modern Beauty Rituals
DAVID PODWALL, MD
President
Nassau County Medical Society
JOHN POHLMAN, CPA
Senior Vice President & Chief Operating Offcer/Chief Financial Offcer
Mount Sinai South Nassau

CHRISTINE PONZIO
Executive Director
Winters Center for Autism
KAITLIN POWERS
Regional Director of Admissions
Long Beach Nursing and Rehabilitation Center

AMY RECCO
COO, Owner & Vice President
Friends for Life Homecare & Medicaid Consultants
JEFFREY L. REYNOLDS, PhD
President & CEO
Family & Children’s Association
YOLANDA ROBANO-GROSS, LMSW, MHA
CEO Options for Community Living, Inc.

STAVROULA SAVELIDIS, MS
Executive Director
Nassau County Medical Society

KERRI ANNE SCANLON, RN, FAAN
Executive Director
Glen Cove Hospital, Northwell Health
MELISSA SCHACHTER, MS, CCC-SLP, TSSLD Director
Speech Language Place
GARY SCHLESINGER
President & CEO
ParCare Community Health Network

SPECIAL THANKS TO OUR EVENT PARTNERS
CMSGT (RET.) EDWARD SCHLOEMAN
Chairman
Operation Warrior Shield
AMY SILVA-MAGALHAES
COO
The Bristal Assisted Living

SHARON SOMEKH, MD, IBCLC Pediatrician
Concierge Pediatric Practice
SPECIAL AWARDS
DISTINGUISHED VISIONARIES
MICHAEL J. DOWLING
CEO
Northwell Health
PATRICK M. O’SHAUGHNESSY, DO, MBA
President & CEO Catholic Health
EDUCATION
DAVID BATTINELLI, MD
Executive Vice President & Physician-in-Chief, Northwell Health

Dean, Betsey Cushing Whitney Professor of Medicine, Donald and Barbara Zucker School of Medicine at Hofstra/Northwell
MARIA FLETCHER, PhD
Associate Dean for Nursing & Associate Professor St. Joseph’s University

DEBORAH A. HUNT, PhD, RN
Dr. Betty L. Forest Dean and Professor of the College of Nursing and Public Health Adelphi University
PETER IGARASHI, MD Renaissance School of Medicine at Stony Brook Stony Brook Medicine
NICOLE WADSWORTH
Dean & Professor New York Institute of Technology College of Osteopathic Medicine (NYITCOM)

CHRISTOPHER R. VAKOC, MD/PhD
Alan and Edith Seligson Professor of Cancer Research Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory
INNOVATOR OF THE YEAR
PROF. CHAD BOUTON
VP, Advanced Engineering, Director of Neural Bypass and Brain-Computer Interface Laboratory, Institute for Bioelectronic Medicine Feinstein Institutes for Medical Research, Northwell Health
ORGANIZATIONS OF EXCELLENCE

FAMILY & CHILDREN’S ASSOCIATION

NEW YORK STATE NURSES ASSOCIATION

R.J. ZUCKERBERG CANCER CENTER
R.J. ZUCKERBERG CANCER HOSPITAL
THERALYMPIC SPEECH THERAPY
*List in Formation

Public Notices
LEGAL NOTICE
NOTICE OF SALE
SUPREME COURT
COUNTY OF NASSAU, CITIMORTGAGE, INC., Plaintiff, vs. DAVID W KEEFER, ET AL., Defendant(s).
Pursuant to a Judgment of Foreclosure and Sale
After Inquest and Appointment of Referee duly entered on July 30, 2015, I, the undersigned Referee will sell at public auction on the front steps on the north side of the Nassau County Supreme Court, 100 Supreme Court Drive, Mineola, NY 11501 on October 10, 2023 at 2:00 p.m., premises known as 3621 Regent Lane, Wantagh, NY 11793. All that certain plot, piece or parcel of land, with the buildings and improvements thereon erected, situate, lying and being in the Town of Hempstead, County of Nassau and State of New York, Section 51, Block 500 and Lot 2. Approximate amount of judgment is $481,785.44 plus interest and costs. Premises will be sold subject to provisions of fled Judgment Index # 4494-14. Cash will not be accepted. This foreclosure sale will be held on the north side steps of the Courthouse, rain or shine. COVID-19 safety protocols will be followed at the foreclosure sale. If proper social distancing cannot be maintained or there are other health or safety concerns, the Court Appointed Referee will cancel the sale.
Ralph Madalena, Esq., Referee
Knuckles, Komosinski & Manfro, LLP, 565 Taxter Road, Suite 590, Elmsford, NY 10523, Attorneys for Plaintiff 141721
LEGAL NOTICE
SUPREME COURT OF THE STATE OF NEW YORKCOUNTY OF NASSAU
DEUTSCHE BANK
NATIONAL TRUST
COMPANY, AS TRUSTEE FOR ARGENT SECURITIES INC., ASSET-BACKED
PASSTHROUGHCERTIFICATES, SERIES 2006-M1, V.
DONALD E. LANG, ET. AL.
NOTICE OF SALE
NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN
pursuant to a Final Judgment of Foreclosure dated June 20, 2023, and entered in the Offce of the Clerk of the County of Nassau, wherein
DEUTSCHE BANK
NATIONAL TRUST COMPANY, AS TRUSTEE FOR ARGENT SECURITIES INC., ASSET-BACKED
PASS-THROUGH
CERTIFICATES, SERIES
2006-M1 is the Plaintiff and DONALD E. LANG, ET AL. are the Defendant(s).
I, the undersigned Referee will sell at public auction at the NASSAU COUNTY SUPREME
COURT, NORTH SIDE
STEPS, 100 SUPREME
COURT DRIVE, MINEOLA, NY 11501, on October 10, 2023 at 2:30PM, premises known as 2021 PINE STREET, WANTAGH, NY 11793: Section 57, Block 301, Lot 57:
ALL THAT CERTAIN PLOT PIECE OR PARCEL OF LAND, WITH THE BUILDINGS AND IMPROVEMENTS THEREON ERECTED, SITUATE, LYING AND BEING AT WANTAGH IN THE TOWN OF HEMPSTEAD, COUNTY OF NASSAU AND STATE OF NEW YORK
Premises will be sold subject to provisions of fled Judgment Index # 010017/2015. Melvyn Roth, Esq. - Referee. Robertson, Anschutz, Schneid, Crane & Partners, PLLC 900 Merchants Concourse, Suite 310, Westbury, New York 11590, Attorneys for Plaintiff. All foreclosure sales will be conducted in accordance with Covid-19 guidelines including, but not limited to, social distancing and mask wearing. *LOCATION OF SALE SUBJECT TO CHANGE DAY OF IN ACCORDANCE WITH COURT/CLERK DIRECTIVES.
141686
LEGAL NOTICE
NOTICE OF SALE SUPREME COURT COUNTY OF NASSAU NATIONSTAR HECM ACQUISITION TRUST 2016-3, WILMINGTON SAVINGS FUND SOCIETY, FSB, NOT INDIVIDUALLY, BUT SOLELY AS TRUSTEE, Plaintiff AGAINST JOANNE ECKHOFF, ET AL., Defendant(s)
Pursuant to a Judgment of Foreclosure and Sale duly entered February 15, 2018, 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 October 5, 2023 at 3:00PM, premises known as 1744 PRINCETON DRIVE WEST WANTAGH, NY 11793. All that certain plot piece or parcel of land, with the buildings and improvements erected, situate, lying and being at Wantagh, Town of Hempstead, County of Nassau and State of New York, Section 57, Block 231, Lot 6. Approximate amount of judgment $491,535.09 plus interest and costs. Premises will be sold subject to provisions of fled Judgment Index #005895/2016. 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”. Francis
Xavier Moroney, Esq., Referee Gross Polowy, LLC 1775 Wehrle Drive Williamsville, NY 14221 16-003713 77411 141643
LEGAL NOTICE NOTICE OF SALE SUPREME COURT COUNTY OF NASSAU WILMINGTON SAVINGS FUND SOCIETY, FSB, D/B/A CHRISTIANA TRUST, NOT INDIVIDUALLY BUT AS TRUSTEE FOR PRETIUM MORTGAGE ACQUISITION TRUST, Plaintiff AGAINST GINA CIPOLLA, ROBERT CIPOLLA, ET AL., Defendant(s) Pursuant to a Judgment of Foreclosure and Sale duly entered March 2, 2023, 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 October 16, 2023 at 2:00PM, premises known as 19 WHISPER LANE, WANTAGH, NY 11793.
All that certain plot piece or parcel of land, with the buildings and improvements erected, situate, lying and being at Wantagh, Town of Hempstead, County of Nassau and State of New York, Section 51, Block 359, Lot 14. Approximate amount of judgment $350,842.70 plus interest and costs. Premises will be sold subject to provisions of fled Judgment Index #613262/2019. 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 A.
Prieto, Esq., Referee Gross Polowy, LLC 1775
Wehrle Drive Williamsville, NY 14221
19-003740 77572
141769
RESOLUTION CALLING A PUBLIC HEARING ON A PROPOSED FIRST AMENDMENT TO THAT CERTAIN LEASE AGREEMENT DATED MAY 23, 2000 BETWEEN CROWN ATLANTIC COMPANY LLC AND THE TOWN OF HEMPSTEAD TO MODIFY THE LEASE TERM BY ADDING FOUR (4) ADDITIONAL FIVE (5) YEAR RENEWALS BEYOND THE ORIGINAL LEASE TERM AND TO EXTEND THE TOTAL POTENTIAL LEASE TERM TO MAY 22, 2045, UNLESS TERMINATED SOONER AND TO CONSIDER THE DESIGNATION OF THE TOWN BOARD OF THE TOWN OF HEMPSTEAD AS THE LEAD AGENCY AND REVIEW THE LEASE EXTENSION UNDER THE STATE ENVIRONMENTAL QUALITY REVIEW LAW PURSUANT TO 6
N.Y.C.R.R. 617.7 AT THE PROPERTY LOCATED AT 3320 BELTAGH AVENUE (TAX PARCEL #56-H-586), TOWN OF HEMPSTEAD, NASSAU COUNTY, STATE OF NEW COUNTY OF NASSAU.
WHEREAS, Crown Atlantic Company LLC heretofore leased 2,900 square feet of property located at 3320 Beltagh Avenue, Wantagh, New York, for the construction, installation, maintenance, repair and operation of a wireless communication facility (the “Lease”); and
WHEREAS, the Town Board for the Town of Hempstead duly adopted Resolution No. 473-2000 approving and adopting the Lease; and
WHEREAS, the Lease will expire on or about May 25, 2025; and
WHEREAS, the Town of Hempstead and Crown Atlantic Company LLC desire to modify and extend the Lease and provide for four (4) additional renewal terms of fve (5) years each; and
WHEREAS, the Town Board on August 1, 2023 did adopt Resolution No. 984-2023 calling a public hearing to be held on September 6, 2023; and
WHEREAS, copies of said resolution were duly published and posted according to law, and said Town Board did, at the time and date specifed in said resolution, duly met and considered such proposal and heard all persons interested in the subject thereof who appeared at such time and place concerning the same;
Landscapers recognized for garden care

MHA Directors Victor Feiwel and Peter Caso, Larry & Linda Swanson, president Joe Farinella, and secretary Lucy Farinella. Mandalay Homeowners Association presented a Certificate of Appreciation to Larry and Linda Swanson of Environmental Landscaping and Design for maintence on the Mandalay garden.
Public Notices
implementing regulations at 6 NYCRR § 617, as a matter of zoning pursuant to Article 16 of the Town Law of the State of New York; WHEREAS, after due consideration, the Town Board deems it to be in the public interest to enter into and approve proposed frst amendment to the Lease Agreement and NOW THEREFORE, BE IT RESOLVED, that the proposed frst amendment to the Lease Agreement is approved, subject to permissive referendum, and the Supervisor or his designee are authorized to execute the proposed frst amendment to the Lease Agreement of behalf of the Town.
The foregoing resolution was adopted on the roll call as follows:
Ayes: SEVEN (7) Noes: NONE (0)
Dated: Hempstead, New York
September 6, 2023 141993
overall size 200 sq. ft. (100 sq. ft. per face);
LEGAL NOTICE
CASE NO. 26247
RESOLUTION NO. 999-2023
Adopted: September 6, 2023
Councilmember Goosby offered the following resolution and moved its adoption:
WHEREAS, the Town Board has determined that the actions contemplated by the proposed frst amendment to the Lease Agreement will not have a signifcant adverse impact on the environment as that phrase is defned under Article 8 (State Environmental Quality Review Act) of the Environmental Conservation Law and its
LEGAL NOTICE NOTICE OF PUBLIC HEARING BY THE BOARD OF APPEALS Pursuant to New York State Town Law Article 16, New York State Public Offcers Law Article 7, and the Town of Hempstead Building Zone Ordinance, NOTICE is hereby given that the BOARD OF APPEALS of the Town of Hempstead will hold a public hearing in the Old Town Hall, 350 Front Street, Room 230, Second Floor, Hempstead, New York on 9/27/23 at 9:30 A.M. to consider the following applications and appeals:
THE FOLLOWING CASES WILL BE CALLED STARTING AT 9:30 A.M. 569/23. - 570/23.
LEVITTOWN - The Home Depot USA, Inc., Renewal of grants: maintain double-faced, illuminated, detached ground sign;
overall height 20’ & setback 9’4” from front property line on Hempstead Tpke.; Maintain double-faced, illuminated logo sign on existing ground sign (2nd sign not permitted); overall size 88.62 sq. ft. (44.31 sq. ft. per face) & setback 16’ from front property line on Hempstead Tpke., S/E cor. Hempstead Tpke. & Gardiners Ave., a/k/a 3350 Hempstead Tpke. ALL PAPERS PERTAINING TO THE ABOVE HEARING ARE AVAILABLE FOR INSPECTION AT THE BOARD OF APPEALS, TOWN HALL, 1 WASHINGTON STREET, HEMPSTEAD, NY 11550. This notice is only for new cases in Levittown within Town of Hempstead jurisdiction. There are additional cases in different hamlets, towns and villages on the Board of Appeals calendar. The full calendar is available a t https://hempsteadny.gov/ 509/Board-of-Appeals
The internet address of the website streaming for this meeting is https://hempsteadny.gov/ 576/Live-Streaming-Video
Interested parties may appear at the above time and place. At the call of the Chairman, the Board will consider decisions on the foregoing and those on the Reserve Decision calendar and such other matters as may properly come before it 142021
LEGAL NOTICE NOTICE OF PUBLIC HEARING PLEASE TAKE NOTICE
that pursuant to Article 9 of the New York State Constitution, the provisions of the Town Law and Municipal Home Rule Law of the State of New York, as amended, a public hearing will be held in the Nathan L. H. Bennett Pavilion, Hempstead Town Hall,
Town Hall Plaza, 1 Washington Street, Village and Town of Hempstead, New York, on the 3rd day of October, 2023, at 10:30 o’clock in the forenoon of that day, to consider the enactment of a local law to amend Section 202-52 of the Code of the Town of Hempstead to REPEAL “FIRE ZONES” at the following location:
LEVITTOWN JEFFRIES ROAD - North Side - NO STOPPING FIRE ZONE - starting at a point 58 feet west of the west curbline of the Gardiners Avenue marginal road, west for a distance of 60 feet.
(Adopted 3/29/60)
ALL PERSONS INTERESTED shall have an opportunity to be heard on said proposal at the time and place aforesaid.
Dated: September 19, 2023
Hempstead, New York BY ORDER OF THE TOWN BOARD OF THE TOWN OF HEMPSTEAD
DONALD X. CLAVIN, JR. Supervisor KATE MURRAY Town Clerk 141990
LEGAL NOTICE
REFEREE’S NOTICE OF SALE IN FORECLOSURE SUPREME COURTCOUNTY OF NASSAU
U.S. BANK NATIONAL ASSOCIATION, AS TRUSTEE FOR SG MORTGAGE SECURITIES
BACKED CERTIFICATES, SERIES 2006-FRE2, Plaintiff - againstSUZANNE M. BRADY, et al Defendant(s).
Pursuant to a Judgment of Foreclosure and Sale entered on March 15, 2019. I, the undersigned
Referee will sell at public auction on the North Side steps of the Nassau County Supreme Court located at 100 Supreme Court Drive, Mineola, N.Y. 11501 “Rain or Shine” on the 25th day of October, 2023 at 2:00 PM. All that certain plot, piece or parcel of land,
with the buildings and improvements thereon erected, situate, lying and being at Wantagh, in the Town of Hempstead, County of Nassau, State of New York.
Premises known as 3677 Smith Street, Wantagh, NY 11793.
(SBL#: 57-89-105)
Approximate amount of lien $614,197.89 plus interest and costs.
Premises will be sold subject to provisions of fled judgment and terms of sale.
Index No. 010340/2015.
John G. Kennedy, Esq., Referee.
McCalla Raymer Leibert Pierce, LLC
Attorney(s) for Plaintiff 420 Lexington Avenue, Suite 840 New York, NY 10170
Tel. 347/286-7409
For sale information, please visit Auction.com at www.Auction.com or call (800) 280-2832
Dated: August 22, 2023
During the COVID-19 health emergency, bidders are required to comply with all governmental health requirements in effect at the time of sale including but not limited to, wearing face coverings and maintaining social distancing (at least 6-feet apart) during the auction, while tendering deposit and at any subsequent closing. Bidders are also required to comply with the Foreclosure Auction Rules and COVID-19 Health Emergency Rules issued by the Supreme Court of this County in addition to the conditions set forth in the Terms of Sale. 141974
EMPLOYMENT
Help Wanted CIRCULATION ASSOCIATE



Full Time/Part Time
Richner Communications, publisher of Herald community newspapers has an excellent opportunity for a FT/PT Customer Service Clerk in our busy Circulation Department.




Basic customer service and administrative responsibilities include: heavy computer work, answering phones, making phone calls, entering orders, faxing, filing, etc.
STRONG knowledge of EXCEL a must! Knowledge of DATABASE maintenance or postal regulations a big plus. Qualified Candidates must be computer literate, able to multitask, dependable, reliable, organized, energetic, detail oriented and able to work well under deadlines.

Salary Range is $15 per hour to $23 per hour. For consideration, please send resume & salary requirements to: careers@liherald.com
DRIVERS WANTED
Full Time and Part Time Positions Available!
Busy Print Shop in Garden City is Hiring Immediately for Full Time and Part Time Drivers.
Must Have a Clean License and BoxTruck Driving Experience.
Hours Vary, Salary Ranges from $17 per hour to $21 per hour Night Availability is a Must.

Please Email Resume to careers@liherald.com or Call (516)569-4000 x239
DRIVING INSTRUCTORS WANTED

Will Certify And Train
HS Diploma

NYS License Clean 3 Years
$20- $25/ Hour
Call 516-731-3000
EDITOR/REPORTER
Part Time & Full Time. The award-winning Herald Community Newspapers group, covering Nassau County's North and South Shores with hard-hitting news stories and gracefully written features, seeks a motivated, energetic and creative editor/reporter to join our dynamic (and awesome) team! This education and general assignment reporting position offers a unique experience to learn from some of the best in the business. Historically, reporters who have launched their careers with us have gone on to The New York Times, Newsweek, Newsday, the New York Daily News, New York Post, CNN, BBC, NBC News and The Daily Mail, among many others. We look for excellent writers who are eager to learn, enhance their skills, and become well-established and respected journalists in our industry. Salary range is from $20K to $45K
To apply: Send a brief summary in the form of a cover letter describing your career goals and what strengths you can bring to our newsroom, along with a resume and three writing samples to mhinman@liherald.com
MAILROOM/ WAREHOUSE HELP
Long Island Herald has IMMEDIATE openings for a FULL-TIME & PART-TIME mailroom/warehouse helper in Garden City. We are a busy print shop looking for motivated and reliable individuals to assist in various duties in the shop. Forklift experience is a plus and heavy lifting is required. Hours vary, so flexibility is key. Salary Ranges fromo $15 per hour to $20 per hour. Email resumes or contact info to careers@liherald.com
MULTI MEDIA ACCOUNT DEVELOPMENT
Inside Sales
Looking for an aggressive self starter who is great at making and maintaining relationships and loves to help businesses grow by marketing them on many different advertising platforms. You will source new sales opportunities through inbound lead follow-up and outbound cold calls. Must have the ability to understand customer needs and requirements and turn them in to positive advertising solutions. We are looking for a talented and competitive Inside Sales Representative that thrives in a quick sales cycle environment. Compensation ranges from $31,200 + commissions and bonuses to over $100,000 including commission and bonuses. We also offer health benefits, 401K and paid time off. Please send cover letter and resume with salary requirements to ereynolds@liherald.com Call 516-569-4000 X286


OUTSIDE SALES
Richner Communications, One of the Fastest Growing Media, Event and Communications Companies on Long Island is Seeking a Sales/Marketing Candidate to Sell our Print Media Products and our Digital, Events, Sponsorships. Earning potential ranges from $31,200 plus commission and bonuses to over $100,000 including commissions and bonuses. Compensation is based on Full Time hours
Eligible for Health Benefits, 401k and Paid Time Off. Please Send Cover Letter and Resume with Salary Requirements to rglickman@liherald.com or Call 516-569-4000 X250
PRINTING PRESS OPERATORS
FT & PT. Long Island Herald has IMMEDIATE openings for Printing Press Operators in Garden City. We are a busy print shop looking for motivated and reliable individuals to assist in various duties in the shop. Hours vary, so flexibility is key. Salary Ranges from $20 per hour to $30 per hour. Email resumes or contact info to careers@liherald.com
Prsonnl Anlyst (Garden City, NY): Plan cmpany’s rcruitmnt effrts, rview emplymnt applctions to mtch applcnts’ crdntials to job reqs for a globl 3rd-prty lgistcs srvics providr. Reqs: Bach or equiv & 1 yr exp in emplyee trainng & keepng emplyee prfrmnce recrds or rel exp. Salary: $53,394. Mail resume to: HR, Ata Freight Line, Ltd., 400 Garden City Plaza, Ste 404, Garden City, NY 11530.




P/T CUSTODIAL WORKER FOR ISLAND PARK LIBRARY





Afternoon and evening shifts. MonSat. Drivers license req.. High school graduate. Able to lift 40 lbs., Cleaning inside and outside of library. Program set up. Snow removal, run errands, able to climb ladder. $16-$17 per hour. email: jkoenig@islandparklibrary.org..
RECEPTIONIST
Receptionist needed for Publisher and Self-Storage Facility located in Garden City. The ideal candidate should have excellent communications and customer service skills, be professional, dependable and have reliable transportation. Candidate should have computer knowledge and working knowledge of MS Office. Candidate MUST be reliable, punctual and be able to work a CONSISTENT schedule: Job Responsibilities include, but are not limited to: Answering phones and greeting customers, assisting new customers by showing storage facility options and pricing, collecting payments from customers, contacting customers for late payments, applying payments and updating the customer files /data base and other general administrative responsibilities on an as needed basis. Hourly pay $15 to $17 plus eligible for Holiday Pay, PTO, Medical, Dental, 401k with company matching, plus other benefits. Qualified candidates should email their resume, cover letter and salary requirements. No phone calls please. Email your resume to: careers@liherald.com
RESTAURANT Hostess & Server Positions Available (646) 830 4987 email: mc_brando@yahoo.com
Health Care/Opportunities WE HAVE THE HELP
HomesHERALD


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

One Acre of Park-Like Grounds
gunite pool, koi pond, two car garage and an extra-large driveway. Call Alissa Lurie today to schedule your private viewing! 516-967-8828
Q. I read your column about the color of roofs after I put a white roof on my building because the roofing company said it was required. I still believe it was the right choice, but the building isn’t done, and I saw moisture forming on the metal roof deck, just below the new roof. What is causing this problem, and how do I prevent it from continuing? The building still isn’t done, and already this is concerning me that something was done wrong. What can you tell me about this?
Bay Pa RK
190 Meadowview Ave, BA, Ever Dream of Living in A Castle?

This 8000 Sq Ft Mansion is Full of Character. Amazing Architectural Details, Soaring Ceilings, Stained Glass Windows. 5 BR, 6.55 Bths. Sprawling 1.3 Acre Prop with IG Gunite Pool. SD#14. Near All. Must See This Unique Home! REDUCED $2,700,000 HEWLETT
1390 Broadway #102, BA, NEW! Move Right Into This Magnificent

Newly Renovated 2 BR, 2 Bth Coop in Prestigious Hewlett Townhouse. Open Layout. NEW State of the Art Kitchen & Bths, HW Flrs, Windows, HVAC, Recessed LED Lights, Doors, W/D. Community
Pool. Full Service 24 Hr Doorman, Valet Pkg, Elevator, Priv Storage.
Gar Pkg. Near Shops, Trans & Houses of Worship $579,000
1534 Broadway #205, 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!! MOTIVATED SELLER! $579,000
WOO dMERE
504 Saddle Ridge Rd, BA, Move Right Into This Renovated 4 BR, 2 Bth Split with Open Layout in Prime Location!

Granite/Wood EIK Opens to Dining Room & Living Room.
Lower Level Den. HW Flrs, Gas Heat, CAC. Oversized Property!
SD#14. Near All! REDUCED!
Alissa Lurie Licensed Real Estate Salesperson 516-967-8828








Alurie@coachrealtors.com

Coach Realtors 1315 Broadway Hewlett, NY 11557 516.374.0100 www.CoachRealtors.com

A. It’s true that your white roof was a great choice because of its reflectivity, and throughout the industry there’s a lot of good information about the results from choosing a white roof over a black one. Studies show that the reflectivity has a significant effect on keeping cooling costs lower, but that’s not the whole story. As I have written many times, buildings are systems, and nature never fails to be consistent, taking all factors into account. In areas of the world that have low humidity and high temperatures, the white color responds better as a system, because the condensation from humidity is kept in check by indoor to outdoor conditions being balanced by lack of moisture getting in from the outside, and indoor humidity being controlled by consistent removal of moisture by air conditioning. This is not to say that air conditioning is actually doing the job of removing moisture from the interior, but the key to your problem is humidity control, and your description gave clues as to your current problem.

If your building is brand new, and the concrete poured floors over the steel decking are recent, then your building is still trying to dry out. The concrete and other fresh materials are still holding some of the water that helped mix the materials. The same happens with houses that have new lumber that is still losing moisture from its fibers, for example. Your building needs to be aired out with dehumidification, and you should consult the mechanical engineer and mechanical contractor to coordinate getting the moisture out of the building in a methodical way. Just opening the windows won’t help, since humid outdoor conditions can replenish lost moisture in every absorbent material, from finishes to wallboard, concrete and fabric.
This is one of the most misunderstood parts of building systems. You’re very observant to have seen the moisture and caught it in time. Over the lifespan of the building, you would have observed deterioration, mold and distortion of many of the products installed to make the building come together. This is why many materials don’t last as long as they’re supposed to, and it’s the No. 1 reason for movement and separations, cracking and discoloration.
Condensation is a silent beast that ruins buildings very slowly and steadily. Fortunately, we have better equipment to control humidity than ever before. Your white roof was a smart decision.
The roof is the right color, but moisture’s getting throughAsk
ROCKVILLE CENTRE OFFICE SPACE
100 North Village Avenue

• Full service boutique professional hub specifically appealing to behavioral/mental health professionals.


Home Sales
Baldwin $660,000
Lakeside Drive. Colonial. 3 bedrooms, 2.5 bathrooms. Finished basement. Eat-in kitchen with granite countertops. Formal dining room. Den/family room. Large oversized yard. Situated in Silver Lake area on the Oceanside border.
Taxes: $13,321
Bellmore $830,050
Judith Drive. Splanch. 4 bedrooms, 2.5 bathrooms. Partial finished basement. Eat-in kitchen. Formal dining room. Den/family room and home office.
Taxes: $16,954.25
East Meadow $642,000
Aaron Avenue. Colonial. 4 bedrooms, 2 bathrooms. Eat-in kitchen with granite countertops. Formal dining room. Den/ family room and home office. 2 decks and indoor/outdoor porch above the garage. Oversized rooms.
Taxes: $10,882.81
Elmont $640,000
Wellington Road. Cape. 3 bedrooms, 2 bathrooms. Finished basement. Eat-in kitchen with granite countertops and new LG Signature refrigerator. Formal dining room. First floor master bedroom. All large rooms with ample storage. Updates include electric and plumbing with smart thermostat.
Taxes: $10,575
Hewlett $725,000
Felter Avenue. Colonial. 4 bedrooms, 2.5 bathrooms. Living room with fireplace. Spacious rooms. First floor bedroom. Oversized property with deck. Convenient location near shopping, dining, LIRR.
Taxes: $14,286.97


Malverne $845,000
Gold Circle. Expanded Ranch. 5 bedrooms, 3 bathrooms. Eat-in kitchen with pantry. Formal dining room. Den/family room and exercise room.
Taxes: $15,758.38
Merrick $770,000
Frankel Boulevard. Colonial. 3 bedrooms, 2.5 bathrooms.

Gourmet eat-in kitchen with quartz countertops, extended breakfast room and sliders to deck. Formal dining room. Den/family room. Country club-style backyard with professional landscaping, inground saltwater pool. Central air conditioning.
Taxes: $14,730
Oceanside $604,000
Westlake Avenue. Ranch. 3 bedrooms, 2 bathrooms. Finished basement. Eat-in kitchen with granite countertops. Updates include cathedral ceiling and skylight.
Taxes: $12,438
Rockville Centre $910,000
Brower Avenue. Colonial. 5 bedrooms, 2.5 bathrooms. Partial finished basement. Formal dining room. Den/family room and home office. Updates include cathedral ceiling and skylight.
Taxes: $14,226.25
Source: The Multiple Listing Service of Long Island Inc,, a computerized network of real estate offices serving Nassau, Suffolk, Queens, and Brooklyn.


• Conveniently located one block north of the LIRR with plentiful on‑site and municipal parking.
• Meticulously maintained and updated with newly furnished and unfurnished suites.
• Part time and full time offices available. Attentive owner on premises and includes use of office equipment and services.
• WIFI included.
• 24/7 access.
• Security cameras located throughout.

Please call 516 766 1188 or email us at mitch@rocamanagement.com




IT IS STILL A SELLERS MARKET!
While The Market Is Still HOT!! Call Me For A FREE Market Evaluation #therightagentmeanseverything
Erica Nevins
Licensed RE Salesperson 516-477-2378 erica.nevins@remax.net 3305


REAL ESTATE
Open Houses
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...$449,000 Ronnie Gerber, Douglas Elliman 516-238-4299 HEWLETT BA, 1390 Broadway #102, NEW! Move Right Into This Magnificent Newly Renovated 2 BR, 2 Bth Coop in Prestigious Hewlett Townhouse.Open Layout. NEW State of the Art Kitchen & Bths,HW Flrs, Windows, HVAC,Recessed LED Lights, Doors, W/D. Community Pool. Full Service 24 Hr Doorman, Valet Pkg, Elevator, Priv Storage. Gar Pkg. Near Shops, Trans & Houses of Worship...$579,000 Ronnie Gerber, Douglas Elliman 516-238-4299
HEWLETT BA,1534 BROADWAY #205, BIG REDUCTION!! MOTIVATED SELLER!!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...$579,000 Ronnie Gerber, Douglas Elliman 516-238-4299
HEWLETT BAY PARK BA,.190 Meadowview Ave Ever Dream of Living in A Castle? This 8000 Sq Ft Mansion is Full of Character. Amazing Architectural Details, Soaring Ceilings, Stained Glass Windows. 5 BR, 6.55 Bths. Sprawling 1.3 Acre Prop with IG Gunite Pool. SD#14.Near All. Must
See This Unique Home!..REDUCED
$2,700,000 Ronnie Gerber, Douglas elliman 516-238-4299
Open Houses
WOODMERE BA, 504 Saddle Ridge Rd.,Move Right Into This Renovated 4 BR, 2 Bth Split with Open Layout in Prime Location! Granite/Wood EIK Opens to Dining Room & Living Room. Lower Level Den. HW Flrs, Gas Heat, CAC. Oversized Property! SD#14.Near All!..$950,000 Ronnie Gerber, Douglas Elliman 516-238-4299
Apartments Wanted
VALLEY STREAM/ LYNBROOK/ 5TOWNS Vicinity: Responsible Person Seeking Studio/ 1 BR. Lower Level Okay. 516-569-5054

Apartments For Rent
TRAILERS, STORAGE CONTAINERS, OVERNIGHT, DAYTIME 516 996 5818








































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
MERCHANDISE MART
Antiques/Collectibles




We Buy Antiques, Fine Art, Coins & 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
GOLF BAG W 3 Woods and 8 Iron, $50. (516) 445-3212
SUKKAH 6FTX8FT SPACE, frame steel pipes, curtain heavyweight plastic; roof bamboo; decorations wax fruit. A steal! $99.00. 516.295.1647
TWA MENUS, 3 1970's, 2 Geneva, 1 Paris, plus Antoine's 1940 Centennial Menu, $30. 516-379-2511.

TWIN XL BED, with mattress and sheets. Like new. Baldwin. $50 (516) 254-3640 SERVICES
516-764-7011
Brick/Block/Concrete/Masonry
*MICHAEL LO BAIDO CONSTRUCTION*
Cement Specialist, Brickwork, Interlock Bricks, Belgium Blocks, Stoops, Patios, Driveways, Sidewalks, Basement Entrances, Pavers, Waterproofing. Quality Work, Lic./
Electricians
E-Z ELECTRIC SERVICES, INC. All
Residential/Commercial Wiring, Generators, Telephone/Data, Home Entertainment,


HErald Crossword Puzzle


Handyman 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
E-mail-Frankcav@optonline.net

Home Improvement
BATH & SHOWER UPDATES in as little as ONE DAY! Affordable prices - No payments for 18 months! Lifetime warranty & professional installs. Senior & Military Discounts available. Call: 866-393-3636
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
Privacy Hedge! Arborvitae 6-foot Reduced to $125/each. Free Installation, Free Delivery. Fast growing, High-quality Beautiful & Bushy! Order now to reserve for early Fall delivery. LowCostTrees.com 518-536-1367
SECURE YOUR HOME with Vivint Smart Home technology. Call 866-601-1219 to learn how you can get a professionally installed security system with $0 activation.
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
Power Washing
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In Washington, the inmates are running the asylum
Every few months there is a respected opinion poll that asks how much credibility Congress has. Poll after poll finds that the public’s faith in Congress is at an all-time low, and sinking lower by the week. As a former state official, I follow the daily events in Washington, and the more I read, the more I’m convinced that it may be time to have a recall election to sweep out some of the crazies who are wielding too much power in Washington.
Regrettably, there is no recall process, so there is no way to make the 535 members of the House and Senate accountable to voters other than regular elections.
It is hard to recite in one column all of the missteps that our elected federal officials are committing, but I’ll give it a try. Let’s start with Sen. Tommy Tuberville, an Alabama Republican. Tuberville, whose claim to fame is that he was a successful college football
coach, is holding up over 300 military promotions, including the vacancy of the joint chiefs of staff, because he doesn’t like the military’s abortion policy. Every officer in the Army, Navy, Air Force and Marines is affected by this holdup, but not one Republican senator has been able to get Coach Tommy to change his position.
The Senate is currently under the control of the Democratic Party, and New York’s Chuck Schumer is the majority leader. You’d think Schumer would try to force the Senate to act, but somehow the majority party refuses to try to break the logjam. It seems there’s a Senate rule that allows a member to stall a nomination, or a group of nominations, by placing a “hold” on them. This old-boy tradition is apparently too important to get the military promotions back on track.
Things aren’t much better in the case of Minority Leader Mitch McConnell. Sadly, last year Mc Connell suffered a bad fall at home, and since then he has been experiencing all kinds of problems that have affected his speech. He
has had two startling public incidents that have exposed his underlying issues. But McConnell has been encouraged to stay in the job, because both parties would rather have him as leader than anyone else. There are a few senators capable of taking over that job, but the party leaders prefer to have an ailing leader rather than some new minority boss.
The case of House Speaker Kevin McCarthy is probably the saddest of any Washington story. It took 15 rounds of voting for McCarthy to be elected speaker, and he holds on to his job so long as he can satisfy the Freedom Caucus, a group of far-rightwing zealots who came to Washington to burn down the government. Every day, the caucus members flex their muscles and the speaker jumps to placate them. Under rules that he agreed to, any member of the Republican Conference can move for his ouster, which would force an immediate vote on a new speaker.
McCarthy’s weakness poses a special problem for three members of the Long Island congressional delegation. Repre-
sentatives Nick LaLota, Anthony D’Esposito and Andrew Garbarino are faced with the possibility of a government shutdown on Sept. 30, and their votes, along with those of a few other moderate members, could keep that from happening. The votes of most members of Congress are often ignored by many voters, but there is no way the trio can avoid the wrath of Long Islanders who lose postal or passport service or some other government function if the shutdown happens.
At the same time that the House majority is wrestling with the crazy Freedom Caucus, they will also have to eventually take a vote on impeaching President Biden. I may be a registered Democrat, but I feel free to state that most of my readers tell me this is a a do-nothing House that should be spending its time on things like inflation, border security, migrants and helping less fortunate people survive on modest paychecks.
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.

I’ll be choosing my words even more carefully
I’ll be seeing you, just not every week.
In June, when I wrote, “Column writing through hell and high water,” I told readers I was taking a leave from writing for a few months to help my husband through a serious health issue. Many of you reached out, with kind words and encouragement. I wasn’t surprised. You’re good people.
My husband is doing well, but everything changes everything, and the time away from a weekly deadline made me realize that this is a good moment to take a step back and switch from writing weekly to writing once a month.
Now, I understand that for some of you this is excellent news. You can reduce your aggravation level and possibly lower your blood pressure. This summer, one of my favorite letters was from a reader who said that everything I wrote made her angry, but she would miss me.
Well, Mary, I’m back.
As I go through my days, I think constantly of columns that need to be writ-
ten. What I’m happy to let go is the deadline that has been a boundary in my life, week in and week out, for 40 years. When we traveled, I either had to write two or three columns in advance or find Wi-Fi in the wilderness. I’m not complaining; I felt accountable to my readers.
As I wrote three months ago, this hasn’t just been a column; it has been a running memoir of our times. I wrote my heart out after 9/11, grieving with so many readers who lost loved ones in the towers. I scribbled my way through blackouts, epic blizzards, hurricanes and, for three years, the pandemic.
I wrote about how to sleep better and eat better and find friends and keep friends. Sometimes an idea landed on the page full blown, and sometimes it has been a struggle to compose a cogent piece. I spent my 750 words a week in wildly different ways, from warning folks off the road when my son got his license, to welcoming President Ronald Reagan to Congregation Ohr Torah, in North Woodmere, with a bust of his head in chopped liver, to sharing my grief for my darling girl, Zoe the dog, when she passed at 16. My work has been personal. I have written about my children’s lives, their
mitzvahs and their missteps. My breast cancer. My husband’s heart surgeries. I struggled for days trying to find just the right words to honor my parents when they died. In some ways the column has been a running story of all of our lives. After all, don’t we share the same hopes and dreams, worry about the threats to our Mother Earth and yearn for a safer world for our kids?
Many of my columns have suggested or reviewed books, the other love in my life. In return, many of you have pitched books my way that turned out to be thrilling and illuminating.
As politics got nasty and toxic in recent years, I jumped in, wanting to use my 750 words to rally support for our democracy, women’s rights, LGBTQ rights and laws that ensure equality for every community and every human being. I think these were words well spent, although at times the backlash has been fierce. That’s what opinion columns are for: to stir the pot, open the debate and disagree without getting too creepy. I love newspapering. Ink in my veins is how the expression goes. I will write my monthly column going forward with a renewed focus on our democracy. We
Randi is back, but beginning with this issue, she will appear in the Herald once per month.

have the votes to bring sane and serious people into office. Time to close the chapter on book banning in America. Translated, that means supporting equal justice for all as the former president and his cronies face the consequences of their transgressive, mean-spirited time in office.
Last week, David Ignatius, the respected columnist and longtime Biden friend, called for President Biden to withdraw his bid to run in 2024 because he’s too old. I agree; he is old. But there isn’t a qualified, experienced alternative who has the chops to run and win a national election.
Trump is old, too. He is also unfit in mind, body, temperament and demeanor. He has been criminally charged in four indictments. Biden has boosted our democracy and enhanced our reputation around the world. He has robust skills and a natural charm that can’t be learned or bought. His team is working well for America during a treacherous time in our history.
Run, Joe, run.
Copyright 2023 Randi Kreiss. Randi can be reached at randik3@aol.com.
RANDI KREISS
I ’m happy to let go the deadline that has been a boundary in my life.
House Speaker
Kevin McCarthy is busy wrestling with the crazy Freedom Caucus.JERRY KREMER
HERALD
A call for responsible boating
Although it’s late in the season, boating safety should remain at the forefront for everyone on the water.
Whether boating off the South Shore of Nassau County or the North Shore’s Long Island Sound, having a safe and fun day on the water is the goal. And that includes personal watercraft operators and their passengers.
But boating can quickly turn treacherous without proper precautions, and a commitment to safety.
Every year, more than a dozen people die in boating accidents in New York — with 28 dying last year alone, according to the state parks department. These incidents are not mere statistics — they represent lives disrupted and ecosystems harmed.
To safeguard against such tragedies and to preserve the waterways, boat
LETTERS
Time to get back on trains, out of our cars
To the Editor:
operators and their passengers should be educated on fundamental seamanship and waterway rules, how to use their equipment properly, and basic first aid.
Knowing what navigational markings mean goes a long way in reducing hazardous situations such as running aground and passengers falling overboard. Equally crucial is the necessity for personal flotation devices. The majority of boating-related fatalities are caused by not wearing lifejackets. Twenty-one of the 28 people who died last year weren’t wearing them.
Boating under the influence is a grave danger. Just as drinking and driving are a hazardous combination, alcohol and boating do not mix. Impaired judgment and slower reaction times increase the risk of accidents, accounting for 21 percent of the boating fatalities in New
York between 2005 and 2022, according to the parks department. If needed, designate a sober operator and bring along a non-drinking crew member.
Weather conditions can change rapidly on the water. Check the forecast before heading out, and be prepared for unexpected changes. Even experienced boaters can forget to do something as basic as checking the weather before casting off.
Navigational aids such as charts, radios and GPS devices are invaluable tools. Knowing your location and having the means to call for assistance are critical components of safe boating. Making safety a priority can help ensure that every voyage is a memorable and safe experience. There are a couple of good months of boating weather remaining. That’s plenty of time to make good habits routine.
Re U.S. Rep. Anthony D’Esposito’s column “Congestion pricing will fuel further flight from New York” (Sept. 7-13): Congressman Esposito has it all wrong by opposing New York City’s proposed congestion pricing plan, which would charge drivers $23 during peak hours to drive south of 60th Street in Manhattan.
He claims it would create a heavy cost burden on Long Island drivers heading to the city. If you drive into New York, however, you have to look at all the costs.
First, Long Island parkways and surface streets in the city are in a constant state of gridlock. It feels like rush hour from early morning until evening. Once you get to Manhattan, you slow to a crawl, with delivery trucks blocking you on nearly every block. Every day, 700,000 cars, taxis and trucks stream into Lower Manhattan. The average speed is 7.1 mph, and each of those vehicles spews carbon into our heavily polluted environment. MTA bus speeds have declined 28 percent since 2010.
If you have a 75-mile round trip commute and you expense that, according to the IRS, you could write off roughly $48. That’s what the feds see as the wear and tear of putting miles on your car, insurance, maintenance and depreciation. And what about the price of gas, which is spiking at over $4.25 a gallon? If you make a 75-mile round trip five days a week, and your car gets 20 miles per gallon, it will cost you $160 a week.
Once you get to Manhattan, there’s parking. If you can even find an open lot, it’s very costly, $50 to $75 a day in Lower Manhattan. Street parking is almost impossible, since Covid created hundreds of restaurant extensions onto the streets. Couple that with Citi Bike racks, and thousands of parking spots have vanished.
The time we spend in our cars getting into Manhattan is intolerable. I used to broadcast the financial news on the ABC radio networks from BusinessWeek in Midtown. My commute at 4 a.m. took about 35 minutes. That same commute during rush hour can take 90 to 120 minutes. Plus, if you’re going to Lower Manhattan via the L.I. “Distressway,” you’re paying $17 a day, or $85 a week, for the Midtown Tunnel.
Bottom line, if you add up the costs of commuting by car, you’re paying more than $100 a day with parking. And don’t forget about precious time consumed. New Yorkers lose 117 hours on average each year sitting in traffic, costing them nearly $2,000 in lost productivity and other costs. We have the longest commute times of any
city in the country. Wouldn’t you rather see your kids than taillights?

The stress and cost of driving pushed me onto the LIRR and the subways. It’s a relief not to worry about being late for an appointment or sitting in stop-and-go traffic. The LIRR now gets you to the East Side at Grand Central Terminal as well as Penn Station and Atlantic Terminal in Brooklyn.
I do agree with Congressman D’Esposito that the MTA is mismanaged. It should be deconstructed and rebuilt to make it cost-effective, and to rid us of unconscionable overtime and featherbedding. It’s another unfair surcharge on Long Islanders and New Yorkers.
According to traffic engineers, congestion pricing will reduce traffic and pollu-
Searching the sky 2,000 miles from home
On clear summer evenings, I sit on the lawn of William L. Buck Elementary School in Valley Stream — a five-minute walk from my house — with a telescope I was given four years ago at my bat mitzvah. From my small corner of the universe in Valley Stream, peering upward, I see constellations and planets. My eyes travel farther than any landbound human has ever gone, exploring the cosmos through my glass lens. In these moments, I know I love space visible in the night sky, and the science that can describe it.
This summer, I spent six weeks pursuing this passion for astrophysics with the Summer Science Program in New Mexico.
Thirty-four other student scientists and I started by shooting photos of the night sky, using the telescope at Tortugas
Mountain Observatory, near Las Cruces. Then, in flipbook-like fashion, the captured images showed a small speck of an asteroid hurtling through space. From three simple images, we derived coordinates and calculations that could predict the position of the space rock and track its journey around the solar system for the next 50 million years.
Nightly discussions in the observing center with my peers began with thoughts of confusion and questions about how to decipher the symbols and numbers that haunted our whiteboards, but by the close of the program, we found understanding. We spent our days poring over problems and collectively devising solutions to what at first seemed unsolvable. The program allowed us to gain firsthand experience in the work of astrophysicists. Like them, we collaborated and questioned and watched calculations that once existed only in textbooks come alive in the surrounding sky.
LETTERS
tion and persuade people to get back onto the trains. The new funding will hopefully close the MTA budget deficit and improve rail service.
Congestion pricing is now being used in advanced cities like Singapore, London, Milan and Stockholm. It makes those urban areas more livable, less congested and less polluted. Shouldn’t New Yorkers make the choice to do the same? Or do we want to fall behind, pay more for commuting, inhale carcinogenic vehicle exhaust and be fatigued and stressed by the time we arrive at our Manhattan destination?
JIM PAYMAR Rockville CentreD’Esposito’s opposition is ‘shortsighted’
To the Editor:
Congressman Anthony D’Esposito’s shortsighted attack on congestion pricing for drivers entering part of Manhattan misstates or omits key aspects of this much-needed plan.
Specific charges and exemptions from the tolls have yet to be determined. There is no factual basis for the congressman’s claim that “commuters would pay upward of $23 during peak hours.”
D’Esposito acknowledges that “increasing ridership on public transportation is a noble cause.” But this stance cannot be squared with his oppo-
sition to a plan designed to generate $1 billion a year to improve service on the region’s rail and bus lines. The congressman further implies that the MTA doesn’t deserve increased funding due to a “long history of mismanagement.” But he offers no evidence for this contention, and he ignores the impact of the pandemic, which cost the MTA nearly half its operating budget.
D’Esposito cites a “recent rash of violent crime” as a disincentive for drivers to use public transit. Incidents of major crime in the transit system actually decreased by nearly 9 percent in the first five months of 2023, according to the New York City Police Department. Plus, daily ridership is returning to prepandemic levels.
The congressman’s overall contention is that congestion pricing would serve as a tax that would spur an exodus from New York. But commuters could avoid this “tax” simply by choosing not to drive into one of the most congested areas in the country. And congestion pricing would in fact help make an iconic part of New York a more alluring place to work and play.
It’s important to note that driving a car, especially in a densely populated area, is not a benign activity. Pollutants emitted from tailpipes contribute to about 320 premature deaths each year, according to the New York City Health Department. An additional 225 people died as a result of vehicle crashes in the city in 2022. Driving likewise threatens our children by contributing greatly to climate change.
Congressman D’Esposito wishes to
Unlike a typical school day, our work was not accompanied by an unwelcome sense of stress. Instead I felt an exhilarating sense of opportunity, relishing the reality that a high school student like me could tap into the infinite world of space exploration.
As we made our discoveries in Las Cruces, the scientific community was making its own exploratory voyages. In just one summer, the James Webb Space Telescope continued peering further into the past with the infrared space images it produced; gravitational waves were collected using astronomical objects light-years away; and India landed a rover on the south side of the moon.
Working away in the New Mexico heat, I was inspired by the fact that these breakthroughs were applying the same fundamental scientific method we high school kids practiced daily. I felt connected to the greater scientific community, if only in a small way. The world was inno-
vating on a large scale, while our small class learned to develop the potential for our generation to follow in our greatest scientists’ footsteps.
Las Cruces was far from home. It didn’t have a pool or bike paths like the ones in Valley Stream’s Hendrickson Park — but across the mountain, 30 degrees above the horizon, we could see an asteroid moving across the sky through our 24-inch-diameter telescope. Though far from home, I felt comforted by the same sense of awe and passion I had experienced so many times while looking up at the night sky from my backyard.
I came home a few weeks ago, and have since gone back with my miniature telescope to Buck Elementary, to stare at the sky and think of how far civilization has come in understanding it, and how far we have traveled. And now I can appreciate the fact that whether I’m in Las Cruces or here in Valley Stream, I can explore it, too.
Ilana Greenberg is a Valley Stream resident and a junior at North Shore Hebrew Academy High School in Great Neck.

be seen as fighting for the interests of his constituents, even though only a minority of them would likely be affected by congestion pricing. Responsible representation, however, does not rein-
force unfounded fears, nor does it justify threats to public health.

I spent six weeks pursuing a passion for astrophysics in New Mexico.ILANA GREENBERG

