Serving Great Neck, G.N. Plaza, G.N. Estates, Kensington, Kings Point, Lake Success, Russell Gardens, Saddle Rock, Thomaston
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Friday, June 29, 2018
Vol. 93, No. 26
M FATHER’S MY PLACE RETURNS P
KESSEL PROMISES CHANGES AT IDA
SCHWARTZ DROPS RACE WITH KAPLAN
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Hain CEO, founder to step down Company head to receive over $34M BY JA N E LL E CL AUSEN Irwin Simon, who founded Lake Success-based organic food product company Hain Celestial a quarter of a century ago, will step down as chief executive officer, the company announced on Monday. The decision marks another big shift in leadership for the company, whose acquired brands range from Avalon Organics and Better Beans to Lima and WestSoy. Hain Celestial, while experiencing shifts in its board of directors since Engaged Capital entered a cooperation agreement with the company in 2017, had retained Simon as its CEO and president. In a statement, the company said it is working to find a successor. Once one is found, the company said, Simon will become a nonexecutive chairman and work with the incoming CEO during a transition period. “When I founded the company 25 years ago, one of my goals Continued on Page 74
PHOTO BY JANELLE CLAUSEN
Moving on
A Great Neck North High School student reaches out to a line of fellow graduates as she walks down stage to receive her diploma. See graduation coverage on pages 25 to 28.
Everfresh averts penalties for now Village of Great Neck extends facade project deadline, will watch for progress BY JA N E LL E CL AUSEN
Board of Trustees decided to hold off on a $500-a-day penalty against Everfresh last week after The Village of Great Neck the grocery store’s representatives signed up a general contractor to give its facade a facelift. Martin Salamon, the chief operations officer of Everfresh, signed a contract with NYC Builders Contract-
ing Group after a Friday meeting last week, according to Building Superintendent Robert Barbach. “At the end of our meeting, they signed the contract,” Barbach said on Monday. Barbach previously said that based on the grocery store’s past behavior, the village had decided to “impose penalties for failing to meet certain commitments.”
One of those penalties was a deferred prosecution agreement about the facade, which involved Everfresh giving the village a $10,000 bond payment. Everfresh could be fined $500 per late day if it does not finish constructing the new facade by July 1. “In a sense, we’re obligated Continued on Page 82
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