Serving Port Washington, Manorhaven, Flower Hill, Baxter Estates, Port Washington North and Sands Point
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Friday, December 7, 2018
Vol. 3, No. 49
Port WashingtonTimes GUIDE TO
PARTIES, DINING
SHOPPING
HOLIDAY GUIDE PAGES 33-48
POLICE, WATER COMMISH ELECTIONS PAGE 2
NIFA OK OKss COUNTY BUDGET PAGE 6
• december 7, 2018 special section tmor publicat ions a blank slate media/li
Mooney out as school chief after 6 years
H O L I D AY D E C O R
Port superintendent to retire at end of school year; cites health concerns BY J E S S I C A PA R K S Citing health issues, Port Washington School Superintendent Kathleen Mooney announced at Tuesday’s Board of Education meeting that she will retire after the end of the school year. “Anyone who knows me does know that I do not make decisions lightly or without considerable thought and reflection and this is probably one of the most difficult decisions that I have ever have had to make,” she said. “it is truly in the best interests of my own health for me to take this step,” she added. In an email, she said that she has been experiencing unspecified challenges to her health in recent years and she would like to be able to spend more time with her family. Mooney joined the Port Washington school district in 2000 and served in various administrative
capacities before she was appointed as superintendent in 2012. Before being superintendent, she served as the district’s human resources administrator and director of pupil personnel services. She took the position of superintendent at a time when the district was experiencing increasing enrollment. “It was important to address the academic and social/emotional needs of our students, especially with new academic standards, while staying within the tax cap levy limit,” she said in the email. Regina Mclean, a member of Port’s Teachers Association, thanked Mooney for her work on behalf of over 500 professionals in the district. “When Dr. Mooney became superintendent of the Port Washington schools, she changed the tone and created a calm in the district at a much needed time,” Continued on Page 66
PHOTO BY JESSICA PARKS
Children craft their own natural wreaths at Hempstead House’s “Holiday Tales at the Hearth” event. See story on page 12.
Sater, Port figure, in Trump-Russia probe B Y J E S S I C A PA R K S A former resident of Sands Point, Felix Sater, has surfaced as a major figure in the TrumpRussia investigations due to his involvement in negotiations to build a Trump tower in Moscow during the 2016 election cycle.
Sater is known locally for the time he served on the board of the Chabad of Port Washington and for having been the recipient of its “Man of the Year” award in 2010 and 2014. ! The Russian-American businessman, who has worked on a number of Trump
family business deals, including Trump SoHo, was in the limelight again last Thursday after President Donald Trump’s former attorney, Michael D. Cohen, pleaded guilty to having lied to Congress about the details of his client’s Russian real estate dealContinued on Page 77
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