Serving Port Washington, Manorhaven, Flower Hill, Baxter Estates, Port Washington North and Sands Point
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Friday, August 10, 2018
Vol. 3, No. 32
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SENIOR LIVING, PORT NORTH PLANNER BACK TO SCHOOL RETIRES AFTER 51 YEARS
NIFA NIXES MORE COUNTY BORROWING
PAGES 33-48
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Port schools ranked 186th in country Niche.com lists district as 36th best in New York state BY JA N E LL E CL AUSEN Five area school districts were ranked among the top 100 nationwide, according to the ranking website Niche, and at least seven were among the top 100 in the state. Making the top 100 nationwide were Great Neck, Roslyn, Herricks, East Williston and Manhasset. Niche, which measures the overall academics, safety, college readiness, teacher-student ratio, extracurricular activities and diversity of more than 10,000 school districts, gave nearly every school district on the North Shore an overall grade of “A” or higher. The Great Neck school district was ranked seventh in the nation and second in the state. It has a 94 percent graduation rate, 1360
average SAT score, and a studentteacher ratio of 11 to 1, according to Niche. John Powell, the assistant superintendent for business, said the ranking was likely linked to just how many students graduate, where they go professionally and the “solid education” students get. “I do know that taxes are high and the cost of living on Long Island is costly. However, I think if you measure what you get out of it versus what you give into it, I feel the residents are getting a good deal here educationally,” Powell said. “We continually graduate and prepare young people to be a success after they leave their school.” Powell added that it is a “team effort between the parents and the school district.” Roslyn was ranked 33rd in the Continued on Page 67
PHOTO COURTESY OF CAROLE TROTTERE
Several young Northern bobwhite quail were released into the woods of North Hempstead Beach Park on Tuesday. Town officials hope the birds will reduce the tick population.
Town unleashes an army of quails to fight ticks BY LU K E TORRANCE
bobwhite quails into the wild as part of a pest control program. “We’re saying goodbye to Having grown them from when they were eggs, North them and wishing them well,” Hempstead held a ceremony said Town Supervisor Judi BosTuesday to release Northern worth. “It’s kind of like sending
your kids off to college.” The quails, though, were released into the woods not to the strains of “Pomp and Circumstance” but to “Circle of Life” from the Disney movie Continued on Page 67
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