Herald courier 12717

Page 1

Serving New Hyde Park, North New Hyde Park, Herricks, Garden City Park, Manhasset Hills, North Hills, Floral Park

$1

Friday, January 27, 2017

Vol. 66, No. 4

guide to

N E W H Y D E PA R K &DPS &6FKRROV

«ÕL V>Ì > L > Ã >Ìi i` >É Ì À

à ëiV > ÃiVÌ U > Õ>ÀÞ

CAMP & SCHOOLS

HERRICKS BOARD ADDS 4 HOLIDAYS

MAJOR CRIME FALLS IN PCT.

PAGES 31-50

PAGE 2

PAGE 6

ÓÇ] Óä£Ç

Opposition to 3rd track still strong in NHP

READER-IN-CHIEF

3 dozen speak against Cuomo’s $2B project at final public hearing BY N O A H M A N S K A R Nearly three dozen local residents and public officials spoke out against the Long Island Rail Road’s proposed third track Thursday night at a public hearing in New Hyde Park, maintaining opposition in areas the project would most directly affect. The 35 critics accounted for most of the skeptics at this week’s six hearings in New Hyde Park, Westbury and Uniondale. About 80 of the 112 speakers at the first five hearings supported the project, while about 30 opposed it. The opponents, nearly all of whom came from New Hyde Park, Floral Park and Garden City, said they remain skeptical of the justification for the $2 billion project and repeated calls for more basic LIRR infrastructure improvements before the third track is built. “Floral Park is a wonderful

community. Building this third track could ultimately change the valuable enclave forever,” Michael Jakob, president of the Floral Park Chamber of Commerce, said at the hearing attended by about 150 people. The LIRR wants to install a third track along a key 9.8-mile stretch of its Main Line between Floral Park and Hicksville, which it estimates would take three to four years. Gov. Andrew Cuomo announced the project last January and has called it less invasive than a plan proposed in 2005. It would be built entirely within the LIRR’s property lines and would not permanently take any residential property. This week’s hearings on the draft environmental study for the project were required under state eminent domain law because it would take four commercial properties and temporarily use Continued on Page 66

PHOTO COURTESY OF THE NEW HYDE PARK ROAD SCHOOL

New Hyde Park Memorial High School principal Richard Faccio was one of the “guest readers” who visted New Hyde Park Road School classes as part of Read Aloud Week. See story on page 59.

3 seek Floral Park seats as mayor ends tenure Dominick Longobardi, the board’s most senior trustee, is running to replace Tweedy in Floral Park’s Board of Trust- the March 21 village election ees will see a shift this spring alongside two other candidates as Mayor Thomas Tweedy ends for board seats nominated by the Citizens Party, to which all his third and final term.

BY N O A H MANSKAR

five current trustees belong. The slate also includes Frank Chiara, a 17-year village resident, who is seeking Longobardi’s open seat, and Trustee Lynn Pombonyo, a forContinued on Page 66

For the latest news visit us at www.theislandnow.com D on’t forget to follow us on Twitter @Theislandnow and Facebook at facebook.com/theislandnow


Turn static files into dynamic content formats.

Create a flipbook
Issuu converts static files into: digital portfolios, online yearbooks, online catalogs, digital photo albums and more. Sign up and create your flipbook.
Herald courier 12717 by The Island 360 - Issuu