Manhasset 2019_02_08

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Serving Manhasset, Munsey Park, North Hills, Plandome Heights, Plandome Manor, Plandome and Flower Hill

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Friday, February 8, 2019

Vol. 7, No. 6

GUIDE TO NORTHWELL USING NICOLELLO BLASTS VALENTINE’S DAY ARTIFICIAL INTELLIGENCE REASSESSMENT ERRORS PAGES 37-44

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Kimco violated construction permit: town

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ON THE BIG SCREEN

Cut down trees, added paving at King Kullen shopping center BY T E R I W EST Kimco Realty, the owner of Manhasset Shopping Center on Northern Boulevard, violated a construction permit by clearing trees and paving in an unauthorized area, according to the Town of North Hempstead. The realty company had a town-issued permit to make structural and drainage-related repairs to the underground parking garage, said Carole Trottere, the town’s communications director. The garage sits at the edge of the property next to Brinkerhoff Lane, a two-lane road with houses and Saint Mary’s Elementary School and High School. Kimco clear-cut trees on a plot of land between the parking lot and Brinkerhoff Lane without a tree removal permit and expanded the amount of pavement on that property wider than the five feet previously approved, Trottere said. On Dec. 5, the Town of North

Hempstead issued a notice of violation, prohibiting Kimco from making any more unauthorized changes. The town also ordered Kimco to secure the gating that borders the property on Brinkerhoff Lane and the shopping center parking lot to ensure that the public cannot get through, Trottere said. The tree clearing and pavement expansion were meant to be temporary to accommodate the garage construction, said Kimco corporate communications director Jennifer Maisch. The company denied performing any work that overreached its permit. “All work performed at Manhasset Center was in accordance with plans approved by the Town,” Kimco said in a statement. “We have no intention whatsoever of creating a permanent egress. The Town did ask us to stop work outside the building, which we Continued on Page 66

PHOTO COURTESY OF THE TOWN OF NORTH HEMPSTEAD

Hazel Dukes (shown speaking) was among the subjects of a documentary about the civil rights movement in North Hempstead who spoke on a panel at the film’s premiere at the Manhasset Bow Tie theater last week.

Mayors call for state to preserve aid to villages BY T E R I W EST Phrases such as “extremely detrimental” and “this proposal makes no sense” pepper letters local mayors have written to public officials after learning that their villages would lose aid under Gov. Andrew Cuomo’s

proposed budget. They call for a budget amendment that retains Aid and Incentives for Municipalities, or AIM, funding to villages rather than cutting it from#$19.7 million to $3.3 million statewide as the current proposal does. There is no proposed de-

crease in AIM funding to cities. Twenty-seven of the 29 villages in the area would lose their entire share of AIM funding. On Monday night, Plandome Heights Mayor Kenneth Riscica mulled over the poten-

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