Delmonte, Meyer defeat incumbents
BY STEVEN KEEHNER
Challengers JB Meyer and Nadine Delmonte were elected as Port Washington police and garbage collection commissioners on Tuesday, defeating their incumbent opponents.
Meyer received 708 votes, defeating incumbent Frank Scobbo, who got 462 votes. Delmonte received 465 votes to 412 votes for incumbent Bill Scaglione. Scobbo was seeking a second term, while Scaglione was running for a seventh.
Mindy Germain and Brandon Kurz both ran unopposed and won their respective races for water and sewer commissioner.
Meyer owns a Port business, Chief Graphix, which he runs with his wife, Abigail. He also worked on Wall Street for over a decade and was an AllAmerican lacrosse goalie at the University of Virginia.
“I’m excited. I think we ran a really good campaign,” he said. “We ran on honesty and integrity and we got the vote out so I think it was great.”
Meyer saidduring his campaign that transparency between the district
and residents needed to improve. He also promised to help push for the construction of a new police headquarters at a recent debate.
Delmonte is a party planner and general manager at LaMotta’s Waterside Restaurant in Port Washington. She also serves as a secretary on the Greater Port Washington Business Improvement District Board of Directors.
She said her victory surprised her, but she is ready to listen to taxpayers and work with the Town of North Hempstead to make improvements.
“It was a close race,” she said. “I’m super flattered and I thank all of my constituents that really stood behind me. I’m excited.”
Delmonte said she would seek to foster dialogue and feedback from constituents to improve the status quo for the betterment of the community. She will also investigate ways to improve pickups, such as having alternative locations that leave sidewalks clear.
Each of the four winners will serve a three-year term beginning on Jan.1, 2023.
JAZZ HANDS
W. Shore environmental review lacking: Planners
BY STEVEN KEEHNER
The Draft Environmental Impact Statement for West Shore Residences did not sufficiently show how the project meets the goals of
the Port Washington Peninsula, according to a Town of North Hempstead Department of Planning & Environmental Protection review.
The planning department examined the draft environmental
statement, the public hearing transcript from Sept. 28 and all written correspondence. The review compiles pertinent questions and comments on the proposed seven-
Washington T Vol. 7, No. 50 Friday, December 16, 2022 $1.50 Serving Port Washington, Manorhaven, Flower Hill, Baxter Estates, Port Washington North, Sands Point Visit theportwashingtontimes.com or theisland360.com for the latest in breaking news. SANTOS RECEIVED MONEY FROM OLIGARCH’S COUSIN PAGE 9
CLOSING PAGE 3 PAGES 23-38 HOLIDAY GIFT GUIDE
WIT AND WHIM
Continued on Page 50
Overcome Scaglione, Scobbo to win commish seats on garbage, police
PHOTO COURTESY OF PORT WASHINGTON SCHOOLS
The Schreiber High School Jazz Ensemble. They performed “Buena Onda” at the latest Port Washington Board of Education meeting.
has been no discernible improvement in traffic issues affecting
No noticeable change in Port traffic issues: Hynes
BY STEVEN KEEHNER
Port Washington Superintendent Michael Hynes saidthere has been no detectable improvement in trafc issues afecting school drop-ofs and pickups based on feedback he has received.
Hynes made the announcement as a follow-up to a June special town hall on trafc issues.
“I’ve spoken with the Port Police Department to see if they’ve noticed any diference with the morning and afternoon trafc by Campus Drive,” he said. “And the feedback I’ve received at this point is that there’s really no noticeable diference to point out.”
He said that based on his own
observations, the morning and the afternoon seem to be a “bit lighter.”
School board ofcials have speculated that the increased trafc is due to bus route changes and COVID-19. Some students face an hour-long morning bus commute due to route merging, prompting many parents to drop of their children instead.
“I also know that we have an incredible presence with our crossing guards,” said Hynes. “Who, I know for a fact, does an amazing job assisting our students either crossing the street or making sure trafc is fowing as well as it can.”
Hynes said the district will continue to solicit feedback and that he will provide another progress update in the spring.
Kathleen Manuel, assistant superintendent for business, also provided an overview update on the district’s transportation.
She said the district is working to schedule installation on districtowned buses and the contractors’ buses as part of the Stop Arm program. The program will use cameras to monitor and improve bus stop safety by ticketing vehicles that illegally pass a bus waiting to pick up or drop of children.
Manuel also said the district will look to launch a beta program for StopFinder in January. The app will provide real-time bus location and messages, updates and alerts to parents.
NCC drops mask edict within hours
Reversal came following Blakeman call
BY STEVEN KEEHNER
Nassau Community College reversed course and dropped a mask mandate policy Friday after discussions with Nassau County Executive Bruce Blakeman, ofcials said.
The college, which has almost 14,000 students, announced that face coverings would be required beginning Monday regardless of vaccination status because of rising levels of COVID-19 in the county. But hours later ofcials reversed their decision and instead issued a recommendation.
“The college recommends that all individuals, regardless of vaccination status, wear a mask while indoors on campus,” the college website reads.
“CDC states that wearing a mask can help prevent severe illnesses and reduce the spread of respiratory viruses including the fu, [respiratory syncytial virus] and COVID.”
The abrupt change came after meetings between the college president and Blakeman, according to a statement from the Nassau executive.
“After strong and evidence-based discussions with the College President, Nassau Community College is withdrawing their premature decision to mandate masks,” said Blake-
man. “At this time we are monitoring the spike in COVID diagnoses and have, importantly, not seen a spike in hospitalizations. As we have seen in the past, there is very little value in mandating masks to prevent the spread of COVID.”
New York Times COVID-19 data shows Nassau’s seven-day average of new cases was 553 Dec. 12 — an increase of nearly 59% from 348 on Nov. 12.
State ofcials said Long Island had the highest number of COVID-19 hospitalizations and new infections in the state last week. They warned that the increase, combined with current infuenza and respiratory syncytial virus outbreaks, could make for a challenging winter.
“We are surrounded by people who have COVID,” Gov. Kathy Hochul said. “Because so many have been vaccinated, even more should be getting the booster. The efect is not as dire but can still spread to people in a vulnerable situation.”
Hochul ended the state mask requirement in schools in March. She made this decision after consulting with health and education experts, as well as parents, teachers and school administrators and after analyzing several key COVID-19 data trends.
Manhasset Times: Robert Pelaez 516-307-1045 x203 • rpelaez@theisland360.com
Roslyn Times: Steven Keehner 516-307-1045 x214 • skeehner@theisland360.com
Williston Times: Brandon Duffy 516-307-1045 x215 • bduffy@theisland360.com
Port Washington Times: Steven Keehner 516-307-1045 x214 • skeehner@theisland360.com
2 The Port Washington Times, Friday, December 16, 2022 PW TO REACH US PORT WASHINGTON TIMES (USPS#19310) is published by Blank Slate Media LLC, 22 Planting Field Road, Roslyn Heights, NY, 11577, (516) 307-1045. The entire contents of the publication are copyright 2022. All rights reserved. The newspaper will not be liable for errors appearing in any advertising beyond the cost of the space occupied by the error. Periodicals postage paid at Williston Park, NY, POSTMASTER. Send address changes to the Port Washington Times, C/O Blank Slate Media LLC, 22 Planting Field Road, Roslyn Heights, NY, 11577. TO REACH US MAIL: 22 Planting Field Road Roslyn Heights, NY 11577 SUBSCRIPTIONS: Sue Tabakin 516-307-1045 x206 stabakin@theisland360.com DISPLAY ADVERTISING: Steven Blank 516-307-1045 x201 sblank@theisland360.com CLASSIFIED ADVERTISING: Deborah Flynn 516-307-1045 x218 dflynn@theisland360.com EDITORIAL: Editorial Submissions: theisland360.com/submit-news/ • Deadline for submissions 5pm Mondays Event Submission: theisland360.com/local-events/
Neck News:
x203 •
Park Herald Courier:
Great
Robert Pelaez 516-307-1045
rpelaez@theisland360.com New Hyde
Brandon Duffy 516-307-1045 x215 • bduffy@theisland360.com
District will keep taking feedback, provide update in spring
Paul D. Schreiber High School. Based on parent feedback, Port Washington Superintendent Michael Hynes stated that there
school drop-offs and pickups.
PHOTO COURTESY OF WIKIMEDIA COMMONS
Nassau Community College in Uniondale. According to officials, the college reversed course and dropped a mask mandate policy on Friday after discussions with Nassau County Executive Bruce Blakeman.
Port gift shop to close in Feb. 2023
BY STEVEN KEEHNER
Wit & Whim, a Port Washington gift shop at 6 Carlton Ave., will close in February 2023 after a decade in business.
The shop, which sells curated vintage, locally handmade and modern items, made the announcement on Dec. 6.
“We will miss the interaction, correspondence and fun we had with you,” the company posted on Facebook. “We put our hearts and souls into wit & whim and consider ourselves lucky to have met you and to have been in business for all these years. Whether you made a purchase, came in to visit, shared a social media post, or spread the word about our shop, we appreciate you!”
While the Port Washington location will close, the owners are encouraging customers to visit their Huntington location, which opened in November at 187 Park Ave.
Any unused gift cards or store credits will be redeemable until Jan.31, 2023. Gift cards/credits purchased in Port Washington are not redeemable in the Huntington location.
“We wanted to take this opportunity to thank you for being our customers,” they wrote. “It has been an absolute pleasure serving you at wit & whim. We can’t thank you enough for all of your
support and love.”
Laurie Scheinman founded the store in 2012 to benefit various charities; all profits went to a different group
each month.
The Retailer Excellence Award, the Top 50 Retail Stars Award, the 1010WINS Top 50 Businesses in New
York Award and the national ICON Honor Award were all given to the store under her ownership.
Scheinman sold the store to Krissy
Harper
Jacquelyn
in 2018. The store also raised over $14,000 through a GoFundMe campaign in 2020.
Port Washington | 27 School Street | $1,088,000 Located in the center of Port Washington on a quiet, dead-end street, this renovated
3 The Port Washington Times, Friday, December 16, 2022 PW Sun-Filled Colonial
Curl
eat-in
Enjoy
Great
One-car
110 WALT WHITMAN ROAD, HUNTINGTON STATION, NY 11746. 631.549.7401, © 2022 DOUGLAS ELLIMAN REAL ESTATE. ALL MATERIAL PRESENTED HEREIN IS INTENDED FOR INFORMATION PURPOSES ONLY. WHILE THIS INFORMATION IS BELIEVED TO BE CORRECT, IT IS REPRESENTED SUBJECT TO ERRORS, OMISSIONS, CHANGES OR WITHDRAWAL WITHOUT NOTICE. ALL PROPERTY INFORMATION, INCLUDING, BUT NOT LIMITED TO SQUARE FOOTAGE, ROOM COUNT, NUMBER OF BEDROOMS AND THE SCHOOL DISTRICT IN PROPERTY LISTINGS SHOULD BE VERIFIED BY YOUR OWN ATTORNEY, ARCHITECT OR ZONING EXPERT. EQUAL HOUSING OPPORTUNITY. Diane Andersen Lic. Assoc. R. E. Broker O 516.627.9231 | M 516.695.2400 diane.andersen@elliman.com elliman.com
Colonial ofers 3/4 bedrooms and 3 bathrooms.
up in front of the freplace in the living room that is adjacent to the family room and
kitchen with stainless steel appliances.
the front porch on a lazy afernoon.
deck and patio out back for entertaining.
detached garage. Web# 3425958
and
Conte
Wit & Whim, which sells locally handmade items, will continue at its Huntington location
PHOTO COURTESY OF WIT & WHIM
Wit & Whim. The Port Washington location will close in February.
Family Journey aims for self-care
Week-long retreats in Costa Rica, Mexico and Spain focus on bonding, connecting families
BY STEVEN KEEHNER
Evan Freed’s spiritual journey began a decade ago, not through self-interest or curiosity, but because of his mother’s ovarian cancer diagnosis.
“She started learning how to meditate and just took on spirituality,” he said. “She had done nothing of the sort before that point. So we saw her dive into this and my brother, my father and I all joined in.”
Her cancer diagnosis would prove fatal. Yet Freed said that the family’s meditation and togetherness during this time of adversity brought them closer together. It also laid the groundwork for a lifelong love of self-exploration.
These notions of afection and intimacy serve as the foundation of Freed’s business, The Family Journey.
“During COVID-19, my family went away on a retreat. We went away for the whole summer to Costa Rica to get away and do something fun and diferent,” he said. “That felt the closest that I had felt to what my family went through when my mom was passing away in connecting and bonding with my family. It was just incredible. I needed to bring this to people.”
The Family Journey bills itself as a transformational retreat for families that focuses on bonding, connection and radical self-care. Cultural immersion and deep self-growth experiences are included in separate, curated trips to Costa Rica, Mexico or Spain.
Each trip lasts one week. The cost per person is $4,500, which includes all accommoda-
tion, locally sourced food prepared by a private chef and activities for both children and adults. Each trip accommodates fve families.
Freed, a Port Washington resident, recognizes the privilege he and many of his neighbors have in being able to live in such a community. Besides being aware, he said taking advantage
COURTESY OF THE FAMILY JOURNEY
It’s something that a lot of families don’t get to do in this world.”
Children can attend a nearby camp to learn to surf, horseback ride, play sports, hikeand speak Spanish.
In the meantime, parents can meditate, hike and explore. Deep group discussions, breaking through growth edges while exploring hidden beaches and moving together through yoga, hiking, or ftness are all examples of this.
Freed said retreat attendees will leave with more self-love, patience and understanding of their partner’s and children’s desires.
“It’s like, what do I want? I want my kids to be happy,” he said. “But there’s so much stuf that life throws in between that happiness. As a parent, how do you help direct your child to fgure that out and fnd their own way out? By healing all of your own trauma and not letting that get in the way.”
The Family Journey also hopes to provide the opportunity to learn about oneself and the world through service. Attendees will live and enjoy the locals’ lands while also spending time with them and serving their communities in whatever ways they need.
of those opportunities that others may not have is important.
“We have the privilege to choose the direction that we want to live our lives and the people that we want to impact and how we want our family to live,” he said. “And by actually claiming that is insanely powerful and healing.
“Having my mom be so sick was a big, big push out of my comfort zone for our family,” said Freed. “I think it’s that. Being pushed out of your comfort zone, being in a diferent culture, diferent language, diferent place. Figuring it all out.”
If one is interested, they can visit www.familyjourney.co or contact evan@familyjourney.co for more information.
G.N. pocket track extension complete
BY ROBERT PELAEZ
The Metropolitan Transportation Authority announced last week they completed the Great Neck Pocket Track Extension project, something ofcials said should increase the reliability of service along the Port Washington branch of the
Long Island Railroad.
MTA ofcials said the project, which disrupted weekend train service for Port Washington and Great Neck commuters for the past month, said a segment of track underneath the Colonial Road Bridge was extended 1,100 feet so that
on Page 51
4 The Port Washington Times, Friday, December 16, 2022 PW We
Curious
Gay
We are The
UCC
istmas
5
Christmas
Service 8
Only
Rev
1845 Northern
(across
www.uccmanhasset.org We
Curious
Gay
We are The
Eve
5
Candlelight Christmas
Service 8
Jimmy Only & Rev.
1845
(across
www.uccmanhasset.org
are
& Questioning
& Straight Interfaith Couples & Lifelong Members
Congregational Church of Manhasset
Blue Christmas Service 3 pm Dec. 18 Chr
Eve Children’s Pageant
pm Dec. 24 Candlelight
Eve
pm Dec. 24 Rev Jimmy
&
Lori Burgess
Boulevard, Manhasset
from the Apple Store) Tel: (516) 627-4911
are
& Questioning
& Straight Interfaith Couples & Lifelong Members
Congregational Church of Manhasset UCC Blue Christmas Service 3 pm Dec. 18 Christmas
Children’s Pageant
pm Dec. 24
Eve
pm Dec. 24 Rev.
Lori Burgess
Northern Boulevard, Manhasset
from the Apple Store) Tel: (516) 627-4911
PHOTO
A group of people mediating. The Family Journey bills itself as a transformational family retreat that focuses on bonding, connection and radical self-care.
PHOTO BY ROBERT PELAEZ
Officials at Great Neck’s Long Island Railroad station discussing express service modifications.
Continued
5 The Port Washington Times, Friday, December 16, 2022 PW Each Ofce is Independently Owned and Operated. CALL BETH TO EXPERIENCE HER SPECIAL TOUCH! BETH CATRONE Associate Real Estate Broker Gold Circle of Excellence Port Washington Ofce 350 Main Street, Port Washington, NY 516.883.2900, c.516.647.1729 bethcatrone@danielgale.com danielgale.com Thank you to my clients, colleagues, friends and family for making 2022 an incredible year. “Wishing everyone a very joyous, warm and happy holiday season!” Happy Holidays – BETH
Floral Park police can seek mediation
Officers who worked during COVID-19 peak may go to arbitration for double-time pay, court says
BY BRANDON DUFFY
Floral Park police ofcers who worked during the height of the COVID-19 pandemic have a right to go to arbitration for double-time pay they said their contract calls for, New York’s Appellate Division of the State Supreme Court has ruled.
The Floral Park Police Benevolent Association in September 2020 began an arbitration proceeding, a process in which a third party helps settle labor disputes, against the village in seeking a “Contract Interpretation” for a provision in their collective bargaining agreement titled “Additional Paid Holidays,” according to court documents.
The holiday provision says when the mayor, or designated representative in their absence, declares a holiday for village employees for either an emergency or other reasons, “the members who have reported to work prior to such declaration or actually worked thereafter shall have such time worked payable at the option of the Village Board on either a cash basis or as compensatory time.”
Mayor Kevin Fitzgerald said during the Dec. 6 board of trustees meeting that the PBA’s claims are “without merit.”
“It was and is the village’s position that the CBA’s “Holiday” pay provisions are inapplicable, were never triggered in this instance, and that the PBA’s claims are without merit,” Fitzgerald said in a statement. “The New York State Supreme Court, Nassau County, agreed with the Village and enjoined the PBA’s arbitration from
proceeding. However, the New York State Appellate Division ruled recently that the merits or lack of merit of the PBA’s claim should be determined by an arbitrator and not the courts.”
Mineola OKs zoning changes to aid biz
BY BRANDON DUFFY
The Mineola Board of Trustees voted unanimously to create two business overlay districts on part of Jericho Turnpike and downtown to give the village more fexibility when considering future developments.
The vote accomplishes something Mayor Paul Pereira said he wanted to do early in his administration when he was elected this year.
“When I became mayor, one of the frst things I did was call our urban planner, Paul Grygiel, to come to Mineola and walk the turnpike and walk downtown,” Pereira said Wednesday night. “Over the next few months, we worked on a plan to come up with ideas to reinvigorate the village and think of alternative ways to develop the vacant spaces.”
Specifcally, the districts take place on the strip of Jericho between Willis Avenue and Marcellus Road and downtown on Main Street, First Street and Second Street between Mineola Boulevard and Willis.
The frst public hearing for a proposal that would use the new downtown overlay district is set for Wednesday, Dec. 14.
If approved by the board, future developments can now exceed the maximum height of 25 feet but not go above 40 feet within the districts, which places a cap on what the village’s master plan enacted in 2005 allowed.
Pereira added the districts allow the village and developers to “think outside the box.”
“The motivation for me is not to build higher, build denser and add more congestion, it’s quite the opposite,” Pereira said. “The motivation for me, as someone who grew up here, I remember seeing outside village hall a hardware store, liquor store, clothing stores. Those other businesses are not coming back and what we have is empty storefronts.”
The board began the process to consider the districts in December when Grygiel, a city planning and development consultant with experience in the village, presented his fndings on how to revitalize diferent parts of Mineola.
Grygiel noted then that the master plan labeled the Jericho Turnpike area as an appropriate place for pedestrian-oriented development, mentioning specifcally that some outside-thebox methods of increasing development would be mixed-residential buildings, a conference space, hotel or movie theater, among other possibilities.
Pereira clarifed for the audience Wednesday the districts do not mean there is going to be an infux of unwanted development. For Jericho, He said he does not envision it changing drastically in the near future but said the village has more options both now and decades in the future.
This is not the frst time the village and its PBA disputed pay.
The police asked the village for extra compensation in December 2012 for their work dur-
ing and in the aftermath of Sandy between Oct. 29 and Nov. 5 of that year.
The village had paid the ofcers $153,306 in overtime pay when the union fled the grievance, according to the Nassau County Supreme Court ruling.
But because Mayor Thomas Tweedy had declared an emergency during Sandy, the PBA argued their contract with the village entitled them to more compensation.
The state Appellate Division court ruled in 2015 the police union was entitled to arbitration because its collective bargaining agreement with the village provided for it and no law prohibits it. The ruling reversed the county Supreme Court’s denial of the arbitration from October 2013, which the village requested because it said the police union did not follow its grievance process correctly.
In 2019, the grievance was settled in accordance with a fully executed stipulation of settlement, according to court documents.
While the litigation remains ongoing, Fitzgerald said the village cannot comment on it.
“The village may need to arbitrate the PBA’s claim that they are entitled to the additional ‘holiday’ pay during COVID. The Village’s position remains that the PBA’s claim lacks any merit,” Fitzgerald said. “We will continue to keep the taxpayers advised of any future developments when they occur, but understand due to the current litigation no further comments will be made at this time.”
Wife of ex-Port North trustee replaces him
BY STEVEN KEEHNER
Andrea Schef, the wife of former Port Washington North trustee Sherman “Sherm” Schef, who died in June, was appointed to fll his vacancy on the village board in October.
Sherman died on June 27 at 88.
Serving the village from 2008 until his death, ofcials agreed not to fll his vacant seat right away. Mayor Robert Weitzner and others
eventually approached his wife about the opportunity to succeed him, which she accepted.
“I’m proud to be on [the village board],” Andrea Schef said. “And I am really proud of how this board works because I’ve heard about it for years.”
Schef said she knew how hard the village board worked through listening to her husband speak on the issues. Weitzner added that her appoint-
6 The Port Washington Times, Friday, December 16, 2022 PW
PHOTO BY BRANDON DUFFY
Floral Park Mayor Kevin Fitzgerald, left, and Trustee Frank Chiara give their reports during the Dec. 6 meeting.
Continued on Page 51 Continued on Page 50
PHOTO COURTESY OF WIKIMEDIA COMMONS
The Port Washington North Village Office. Andrea Scheff has been appointed to the village board.
7 Blank Slate Media Newspapers, Friday, December 16, 2022
8 Blank Slate Media Newspapers, Friday, December 16, 2022 We Buy & Sell All Precious Metal Coins & Bars Call For The Current Price Coins Currency Diamonds Gold Jewelry Military Platinum Silver Sports Cards Comic Books Better Watches GETTING PAID IS EASY Jewelr y Militar y Sell Us Your Valuables For The Highest Price FREE Verbal Appraisals The Coin & Jewelry Exchange 642 Franklin Avenue Garden City, NY 11530 Eastern Numismatics 1-800-835-0008 Bu sin ess Hou rs: M onday-Fr iday 10:0 0 AM to 4:30 P M. Sell with confdence in our private examination rooms 48 Years at the Same Location Attention Attorneys: Eastern offers Estate Appraisals for all items we purchase. We are a Federally Licensed Firearms Dealer and provide firearms removal, storage and appraisals. See Our Website www.USCOINS.com WE BUY IT ALL s
Oligarch’s cousin donates to Santos
Andrew Intrater, relative of Russia’s Vekselberg, gives GOP candidate’s campaign $29K
BY ROBERT PELAEZ
Republican congressman-elect George Devolder-Santos received nearly $30,000 in campaign donations from the American cousin of a Russian oligarch, according to data from the Federal Election Commission.
Andrew Intrater, who heads the investment firm Sparrow Capital (formerly Columbus Nova), donated $29,500 to Devolder-Santos’ successful campaign against Democrat Robert Zimmerman for the state’s 3rd Congressional District in November. Intrater is the cousin of Viktor Vekselberg, an ally of Russian President Vladimir Putin, whose net worth is $7.65 billion.
Vekselberg, who was born in Ukraine, made his first million from selling scrap copper before purchasing several aluminum smelters and forming the conglomerate Sual Holding in 1996, according to Forbes. Vekselberg merged Sual Holding with Russian Alumnium to create UC Rusal.
Columbus Nova described itself as “the U.S.-based affiliate” of the oligarch’s Renova Group, according to Securities and Exchange Commission documents in 2007.
The rebrand of Columbus Nova to Sparrow Capital came in 2018, following the U.S. Department of Treasury’s
freezing of nearly all the company’s assets.
The oligarch’s $90 million, 255foot yacht was seized by the Spanish government in April at the order of the United States. The U.S. Department of Justice said the yacht “was subject to
forfeiture based on violations of U.S. bank fraud, money laundering, and sanction statutes.”
Federal officials stressed the importance of monitoring the activity for individuals and organizations that fueled Russia to continue the war against
Ukraine launched earlier this year.
“Together, with our international partners, we will do everything possible to hold accountable any individual whose criminal acts enable the Russian government to continue its unjust war,” U.S. Attorney General Merrick B.
Garland said in a statement following the seizure.
Devolder-Santos, who recently attended a press conference to welcome Ukrainian Consulate General Oleksii Holubov to Long Island, described Ukraine as a “totalitarian regime” to the Washington Post earlier this year.
“Look, if the Ukrainians really hated Russia so bad, the eastern border of Ukraine wouldn’t have welcomed Russians into their provinces,” Devolder-Santos said in a February article. “They feel more Russian than Ukrainian.”
Less than a week before the Washington Post article was published online, Devolder-Santos tweeted “Pray for Ukraine!”
Efforts to reach Devolder-Santos for comment on the matter were unavailing.
Election commission filings also showed Intrater donated $11,600 to Santos for his 2020 congressional campaign, which ultimately resulted in a loss to current U.S. Rep. Tom Suozzi (D-Glen Cove).
The Daily Beast publication said Intrater gave $56,100 to committees tied to Santos, but Blank Slate Media could not confirm those figures on the Federal Election Commission’s campaign financing page.
9 Blank Slate Media Newspapers, Friday, December 16, 2022
Continued
on Page 48
PHOTO BY BRANDON DUFFY
Congressman-elect George Santos during his election night watch party.
10 Blank Slate Media Newspapers, Friday, December 16, 2022 Now through December 31, 2022 To start the subscription visit: www.theisland360.com/subscription or call 516-307-1045 x 206. 22 Planting Field Road Roslyn Heights, NY 11577 • NEW HYDE PARK HERALD COURIER • GREAT NECK NEWS • ROSLYN TIMES • WILLISTON TIMES • PORT WASHINGTON TIMES • MANHASSET TIMES Offer valid for FIRST TIME SUBSCRIBERS only. Must be resident in Nassau County for print edition. Surprise a loved one or a friend with a subscription to one of Blank Slate Media’s award-winning newspapers delivered to their homes every week. SCAN HERE TO SUBSCRIBE SPECIAL HOLIDAY PRICING GIVE THE GIFT THAT GIVES EVERY WEEK FOR AN ENTIRE YEAR $35 FOR 52 WEEKS WEE Sport Psychology Dr. Tom Ferraro has specialized in sport psychology for 20 years and works in the fields of golf, tennis, soccer, baseball, football, wrestling, lacrosse, figure skating, gymnastics, softball, fencing and more. He has helped professional teams, Olympians and elite young athletes learn how to manage the intense pressure of competitive sports. He appears on both TV and radio and has sport psychology columns in 5 different newspapers and has been featured in The New York Times, Wall street Journal and the London Times. Golf Digest includes him in their list of top mental game gurus in America. For a consultation see below: Williston Park Professional Center 2 Hillside Ave, Suite E. Williston Park NY 11596 (building parallel to E. Williston railroad station) drtomferraro.com drtferraro@aol.com (516) 248-7189
Connie Liappas
Licensed Associate RE Broker connie.liappas@compass.com M: 516.319.3274 | O: 516.517.4751
Nicholas Liappas
Licensed RE Salesperson nicholas.liappas@compass.com M: 516.214.7761
Kristen Vlahopoulos
Licensed RE Salesperson kristen.vlahopoulos@compass.com M: 516.672.1577
Carolyn Gelb
Licensed RE Salesperson carolyn.gelb@compass.com M: 516.359.5660
Michael Fthenakis
Licensed RE Salesperson michael.fthenakis@compass.com M: 631.748.3393
Sofa Liappas
Licensed RE Salesperson sofa.liappas@compass.com M: 917.647.4679
11 The Port Washington Times, Friday, December 16, 2022 PW The Liappas Team is a team of real estate agents affliated with Compass. Compass is a licensed real estate broker and abides by Equal Housing Opportunity laws. We are sending you
wishes of warmth, joy and tranquility this holiday season. May your holidays, homes and new year be flled with happiness. We continue to expand our knowledge and tools to provide a valuable real estate experience this coming year.
Duo stole $1M in COVID relief funds: Feds
forms with incorrect company details
BY ROBERT PELAEZ
A Manhasset Hills man and his nephew were indicted for allegedly stealing more than $1.6 million from coronavirus pandemic relief programs, Manhattan District Attorney Alvin Bragg Jr. announced Friday.
William Felcon and his nephew, Thomas A. Felcon of Howard Beach, received federal loans for their companies beginning in April 2020 through June 2021, ofcials said.
William Felcon owns A L One Inc., classifed as a single-family housing construction business online, and A L One Consulting Inc., ofcials said.
Both companies are located in New Hyde Park, ofcials said. Thomas A. Felcon allegedly aided both New Hyde Park companies with the hiring, supervision and payment of subcontractors while also controlling The Nebula Group and GPT Property Consultants Inc.
The two allegedly created fraudulent IRS forms that incorrectly reported the number of employees for each company and the amount of each company’s wages and payroll taxes, the DA said. The companies received more than $600,000 in Paycheck Protection Program funds from a variety of private lenders, loan advances and more than $1 million in
Economic Injury Disaster Loan programs, ofcials said.
“The Paycheck Protection Program and Economic Injury Disaster Loan programs were available at the height of the pandemic when New Yorkers needed immediate fnancial
support to keep their businesses afoat. These individuals allegedly defrauded the system and lined their own pockets at the expense of others during a dire economic situation,” Bragg said in a statement. “I am grateful to the prosecutors in my ofce for protect-
ing the integrity of these critical public programs by pursuing accountability in this case.”
The Manhattan District Attorney’s Ofce launched a wiretap investigation in October 2020 until June 2021, ofcials said. The wiretap investiga-
tion was prompted by law enforcement ofcials noticing suspect fnancial transacations by various drywall construction companies based in New York City, the ofce said.
William Felcon is charged with one count of second-degree grand larceny, one count of third-degree grand larceny, one count of seconddegree attempted grand larceny, one count of scheme to defraud in the frst degree, one count of ffth-degree conspiracy and nine counts of falsifying business records in the frst degree, prosecutors said.
Thomas A. Felcon is charged with fve counts of second-degree grand larceny, three counts of third-degree grand larceny, two counts of seconddegree attempted grand larceny, one count of scheme to defraud in the frst degree, one count of ffth-degree conspiracy and nine counts of falsifying business records in the frst degree, ofcials said.
The two entered not-guilty pleas and were released on their own recognizance, ofcials from the district attorney’s ofce said. Both were due back in court Feb. 10, ofcials in the DA’s ofce said.
William Felcon’s attorney, Murray Richman, told Newsday his client “is a really good man,” while declining to comment further.
Manhasset awaits state guidance on mascot Chaminade staff saves student’s life
BY ROBERT PELAEZ
The Manhasset School District, like Sewanhaka, will also be awaiting further guidance from the state’s education department before making a decision on potentially changing its mascot.
The state DOE released a memo on Nov. 17 ordering school districts to stop using mascots, team names or imagery depicting Native Americans by the end of the 2022-2023 school year or risk losing state aid.
Manhasset Superintendent Gaurav Passi did not commit to changing the district’s “Indians” mascot in a statement to Blank Slate Media Friday.
“We are awaiting regulations that the State Education Department indicated they would be putting forth in the coming month clarifying the District’s obligations,” Passi said in a statement.
Sewanhaka Superintendent James Grossane said at the district’s Dec. 1 Board of Education meeting that they are also waiting to receive regulations from the education department. The district mascot is also the “Indians.”
“This was a topic of great discussion at the county’s superintendent meeting last week and the advice we received and are following is we are waiting for the regulations,” Grossane said.
The Sewanhaka superintendent also made mention of online petitions that circulated in 2020 to have his district and Manhasset change
their mascots. Manhasset’s petition, organized by alum Jo Trigg, has gained nearly 6,000 signatures since it was launched two years ago.
“To prove how wrong this mascot is, consider a mascot called the Blacks, the Jews, the Caucasians, the Asians, image and all?” Trigg wrote in the petition. “If it sounds completely ridiculous and ofensive, it is because it is. There’s no way to justify the mascot as it is.”
Trigg recently told Patch.com that the state’s education department made a memorandum more than 20 years ago that schools that depict Native American imagery should stop doing so.
“Many other states with signifcant Indigenous populations made these mascot changes back in the ’90s,” Trigg told Patch. “We have to ask ourselves what has taken so long?”
The history of Manhasset’s “Indian” mascot is traced back to the Matinecock Indian Tribe, a group that occupied a majority of the Town of North Hempstead.
The Matinecocks were forcibly removed from the territory, with Manhasset keeping the “Indian” mascot name along with having an orange feather attached to the “M” in their logo and calling their newspaper “Indian Ink.”
More than 30 members of the Manhasset High School’s Class of 2021, including student government representatives and varsity athletic team captains, co-signed an email last year that accused the Board of Education of making a
BY BRANDON DUFFY
A Chaminade High School basketball player’s life was saved last week after he collapsed to the foor during a practice before being resuscitated by members of the staf.
P.J. Kellachan, a 17-yearold varsity player from Rockville Centre who is committed to play basketball at the University of Scranton in Pennsylvania, had a seizure and went into cardiac arrest Dec. 6 on the school’s Activities and Athletic Center Court.
For approximately 10 minutes, assistant coach Bob Paul and athletic trainer Jorge Vargas performed CPR on Kellachan after shocking him with an AED device when his heart stopped.
“Thank you to the amazing athletic and training staf at Chaminade who saved my life after seizing and losing a heartbeat. Unequivocally
something I will never be able to repay them for. Flyers rule,” Kellachan tweeted two days later with a picture of himself, Paul and Vargas.
Kellachan was taken to NYU Langone that night and the senior forward returned
to school Friday.
Since the incident, the team has shown no signs of slowing down. Standing at 4-1 on the season, the Flyers earned wins against Kings Park Dec. 8 and High School for Construction Dec. 10.
12 The Port Washington Times, Friday, December 16, 2022 PW
PHOTO COURTESY OF GOOGLE MAPS
Continued on Page 51
Chaminade’s P.J. Kellachan experienced cardiac arrest during practice on Dec. 6.
Manhasset Hills man, nephew allegedly created fraudulent IRS
PHOTO COURTESY OF WIKIMEDIA COMMONS
A Manhasset Hills man and his nephew were indicted for allegedly stealing more than $1M in pandemic relief funds, officials announced Friday.
13 The Port Washington Times, Friday, December 16, 2022 PW LARGEST VOLUNTEER ORGANIZATION IN THE COMMUNITY OUR TRAINING & EXPERIENCE CAN LEAD TO CAREER OPPORTUNITIES COLLEGE SCHOLARSHIP PROGRAMS AVAILABLE FOR MORE INFORMATION, PLEASE CONTACT THE PORT WASHINGTON FIRE DEPARTMENT HEADQUARTERS (516) 883-2200 Visit www.pwfd.com FIND US ON FACEBOOK Port Washington Fire Department FOLLOW US ON TWITTER - @PortFireNY PORT’S BRAVEST? FIREFIGHTERS AND EMT’S NEEDED NO EXPERIENCE NECESSARY, WE WILL TRAIN FIREFIGHTER MINIMUM AGE 17 EMT MINIMUM AGE 18 DO YOU HAVE WHAT IT TAKES TO BE ONE OF
Fighting for rights long protected in law
The House vote last week to approve legislation to mandate the recognition of samesex and interracial marriages across the United States was notable in several ways with large implications nationally and for New York.
For one, the measure’s success reflected a stunning cultural and political shift on the issue of same-sex marriage over the past 20 years.
The legislation overturned the 2016 Defense of Marriage Act, which banned federal recognition of samesex marriage by limiting the definition of marriage to the union of one man and one woman.
The legislation was signed into law by President Bill Clinton, a Democrat.
By contrast, the 259-169 House vote for the Respect for Marriage Act was bipartisan with 39 Republicans joining all Democrats in supporting the legislation.
The 39 Republicans included five from New York, including Long Island Rep. Andrew Garbarino, whose district covers parts of Nassau and Suffolk, and Rep. Elise Stefanik, the chair of the Republican conference and strong supporter of former President Donald Trump.
The 39 House Republicans joined 12 Republican senators who approved the legislation a month ago.
President Biden who signed the legislation into law on Tuesday had earlier called Congress’ support “a critical step to ensure that Americans have the right to marry the person they love.”
Congress’ vote comes at a time when an ultra-conservative Supreme Court majority is actively removing the rights of people approved by previous courts — regardless of precedent.
Sen. Tammy Baldwin, Democrat of Wisconsin and the first openly lesbian official elected to Congress, had sponsored the legislation after Justice Clarence Thomas suggested in his
opinion in the June ruling overturning Roe v. Wade, which had established a constitutional right to abortion, that the court also “should reconsider” precedents enshrining marriage equality and access to contraception.
The legislation appeared at the time as an effort by Democrats to highlight social issues during the midterm elections.
But an unexpectedly large number of House Republicans announced their support for the legislation.
The vote also showed how changes in attitudes among the public can drive public policy.
Over the past 20 years, same-sex marriage has become widely accepted with polls showing that more than 70% of voters support same-sex marriage.
Baldwin’s proposed legislation was supported by a bipartisan group of “proponents in the Senate — boosted quietly by a coalition of influential Republican donors and operatives, some of them gay — to find the at least 10 Republican votes necessary in that chamber to move it forward,” according to The New York Times.
We would like to think that the public’s overwhelming support for gun safety will also translate into further action on issues like universal background checks and preventing sales of all firearms to people reported as dangerous to law enforcement by a mental health provider.
The same-sex marriage legislation also showed the large cultural differences in this country with most House Republicans condemning the legislation as immoral.
“This bill only serves to further demonize biblical values,” Rep. Vicky Hartzler, Republican of Missouri, said. “This is yet another step toward the Democrats’ goal of dismantling the traditional family, silencing voices of faith and permanently undoing our country’s God-woven foundation.”
We couldn’t disagree more with
BLANK SLATE MEDIA LLC
22 Planting Field Road, Roslyn Heights, NY 11577
Phone: 516-307-1045
E-mail: hblank@theisland360.com
EDITOR AND PUBLISHER
Steven Blank OFFICE MANAGER Holly Blank
Editorial Cartoon
Hartzler, but her comments do serve to illustrate the basis of movements that can be seen in recent years on Long Island.
This includes opposition to books, primarily on LGBTQ subjects, by a slate of candidates to the Great Neck Library Board of Trustees. That slate was recently defeated by candidates who opposed censorship in the library and defended the right of librarians to choose what books to offer the public.
It also includes efforts by wellfunded conservative groups to challenge what is being taught in public schools about subjects like slavery, Jim Crow and even the Constitution
For the record, the word God is never used in the U.S. Constitution. Religion is mentioned in the First Amendment, which states that “Congress shall make no law respecting an establishment of religion, or prohibiting the free exercise thereof.”
Nowhere is the Bible cited as a ba-
REPORTERS
sis for laws.
Instead, the Constitution vests the power in “We the People.”
In the case of the Respect for Marriage Act, people’s rights are expanded by legalizing marriage between people of the same sex. It does not ban marriage between a man and a woman.
Still, these types of conflicts can be expected to become more frequent as a conservative majority on the U.S. Supreme Court overturns decades of precedent in decisions like Roe v. Wade.
That most recently applied to New York’s century-old law strictly restricting the concealed carrying of firearms.
The Supreme Court’s conservative majority also seemed inclined during oral arguments last week to rule in favor of a graphic artist who is an evangelical Christian and does not want to create wedding websites for same-sex
couples
Justice Sonia Sotomayor noted this would mark “the first time in the court’s history” that it permitted a commercial business open to the public to “refuse to serve a customer based on race, sex, religion or sexual orientation.”
Sotomayor and the other liberal justices noted that there is no obvious principle limiting when religious convictions could allow exemption from anti-discrimination laws.
The current makeup of the Supreme Court means that laws that have protected individual rights for many years could be overturned and that it will be up to Congress, state Legislatures and even school and library boards to defend them.
The vote for the Respect for Marriage Act shows that this is possible, but only if members of the public make their voices heard at every level of government.
14 Blank Slate Media Newspapers, Friday, December 16, 2022 Opinion
OUR VIEWS
PRODUCTION MANAGER Rosemarie Palacios EDITORIAL DESIGNER Lorens Morris CLASSIFIED ADVERTISING Deborah Flynn PUBLISHERS OF Williston Times • Great Neck News Herald Courier • Roslyn Times Manhasset Times • Port Washington Times
Robert Pelaez, Brandon Duffy, Steven Keehner COLUMNIST Karen Rubin ACCOUNT EXECUTIVES Stacy Shaughnessy, Melissa Spitalnick, Wendy Kates, Barbara Kaplan ART DIRECTOR Yvonne Farley
Should we care about botched executions?
There has long been debate about whether the death penalty is inhumane, violates the constitutional ban against cruel and unusual punishment, fails as a deterrent and is economically and racially biased.
What we do know is that capital punishment is irreversible.
Defenders of capital punishment maintain that it represents justice, accountability and retribution for certain crimes; protects society; and helps to maintain the moral order.
While it is not the primary focus of this column, it should be noted upfront that according to the Death Penalty Information Center, “since 1973, 190 former death-row prisoners have been exonerated of all charges related to the wrongful convictions that had put them on death row.”
WHEN LETHAL INJECTION FAILS
Looking beyond the pros and cons of capital punishment, should we be concerned when lethal injections are administered and repeatedly fail?
On Nov. 21, the Associated Press reported that Alabama Gov. Kay Ivey sought a break in executions and ordered a comprehensive review of the state’s capital punishment system following an unprecedented third failed lethal injection in two days.
The governor made her decision after the uncompleted execution of Kenneth Eugene Smith, which was the state’s third such instance of being unable to put an inmate to death since 2018. One execution was completed in July 2022, after a three-hour delay because of the same difficulty starting an IV line.
Do botched executions constitute cruel and unusual punishment, given that they are likely to intensify the agony for the inmate as well as their family members, friends, and official onlookers?
The Supreme Court held that the use of lethal injection, in and of itself, does not constitute cruel and unusual punishment. However, it is unlikely that, early on, they considered the extent of the fallout when lethal injections go wrong.
Perhaps it is my failure of character or absence of divine grace, that I cannot envision myself forgiving someone that murdered a loved one, let alone be disturbed if a lethal injection failed and led to additional distress for the perpetrator.
Yet, I am in awe of those that are capable of extending forgiveness under the most dreadful circumstances; such as the surviving parishioners and family members at the Mother Emanuel African Methodist Episcopal Church in South Carolina, where a gunman opened fire and murdered nine people on June 17, 2015.
Could I muster any sympathy what-
ANDREW MALEKOFF The Back Road
soever for the subject of a botched execution? If I was an aggrieved party, a surviving family member, might I welcome even harsher punishment to satisfy a deep desire for vengeance and extended suffering that could be meted out, if even inadvertently?
These are not easy questions and, as you can see, I am struggling with my answers.
Should a murderer’s extended suffering matter to me, given the heinous nature of their crimes? Perhaps not.
Nevertheless, botched executions affect more than death row inmates.
“Botched executions have been ordeals for the men on the gurney, their families, friends, ministers, and attorneys, and all the men and women working at the prison and involved in these botched attempts. The trauma of these executions extend widely to everyone that they touch,” said Bernard Harcourt, attorney for another Alabama death row inmate in a failed execution.
Many capital punishment adherents believe perpetrators of certain crimes “should suffer deaths as painful, if not more painful, than the deaths to which they subjected their victims,” says Bharat Malkani, senior lecturer, School of Law and Politics, Cardiff University, Cardiff, Wales.
“They are therefore unlikely to change their minds about capital punishment just because a murderer has suffered,” Malkani adds. Indeed, the briefest review of the acts of many death row inmates’ crimes makes it difficult to feel sympathy for them.
A 2018 study published by Cambridge University Press examined, “Why have accounts of botched executions not played a larger role in the struggle to end capital punishment in the United States?”
The investigators “examined newspaper coverage of botched executions to determine and describe the way they were presented to the public and why they
have contributed little to the abolitionist cause.”
MISFORTUNE OR INJUSTICE?
They found that “although botched executions reveal pain, violence, and inhumanity associated with state killing, newspaper coverage of these events neutralizes the impact of that revelation. Throughout the last century, newspapers presented botched executions as misfortunes rather than injustices.”
According to Austin Sarat, reporting for SLATE magazine on Nov. 21, lethal injection was adopted with great fanfare in 1977 by Oklahoma and “hyped as the most humane execution method—has proved to be the least reliable of all. From 1977 to 2009, more than 7 percent of all lethal injections were botched.”
Lethal injection is dependent on unreliable drug combinations, compounded by state execution procedures that fail to adequately control what goes on in the execution chamber. Although the Eighth Amendment forbids cruel and unusual methods of capital punishment, it does not guarantee a prisoner a painless death.
In fact, reports Sarat, “the Oklahoma legislators who first proposed it promised that death by lethal injection would be accomplished with “no struggle, no stench, no pain—just a quick, merciful snuffing out of life.”
It looks like they got it all wrong.
Books for political junkies this Christmas
For folks who give books at Christmas to political junkie friends and relatives, here are my 2022 gift book picks.
“One Damn Thing After Another” by William P . Barr. Americans were fortunate Bill Barr agreed to serve a second stint as U.S. attorney general. The memoir of this brilliant lawyer describes how he was not afraid to stand up to President Trump and how he kept the Justice Department from being politicized. Barr bluntly told Trump after the 2020 election there was no evidence of fraud. He pointed out to the angry president that he “had underperformed among certain Republican and independent voters in some key suburban areas in the swing states [and] ran behind Republican candidates below him on the ballot…. It seemed this shortage could explain the outcome.”
“The Divider: Trump in the White House” by Peter Baker and Susan Glasser. This book on the Trump administration is top drawer. This meticulously researched work vividly describes Trump’s management by tantrum. The authors reveal that, Trump, who is not dumb,
was dangerously uninformed. Trump “did not know that Puerto Rico was part of the United States…. [He] did not understand the basics of America’s vast nuclear arsenal, did not grasp the concept of constitutional separations of powers, did not understand how courts work…. He seemed genuinely surprised to learn that Abraham Lincoln had been a member of the Republican Party. ‘He knew nothing about most things,’ observed one top aide.”
“The New Yorkers” by Sam Roberts. The author is one of the Big Apple’s most revered reporters. He served as city editor at The Daily News, and since 1983 he has been at The New York Times writing on urban affairs. His latest work describes the lives of 31 unique New Yorkers who helped make and define the city. The personages profiled include John Jay, president of the Continental Congress; New York’s first archbishop, John Hughes; the noted political boss Charles Murphy, as well as mobsters, actors, and civil rights activists.
“Campaign of the Century: Kennedy, Nixon and the Election of 1960” by Irwin F. Gellman. This is the distin-
ON THE RIGHT GEORGE J. MARLIN On The Right
guished historian’s third volume on the life of Richard Nixon. It is a wellbalanced, very readable, history of the famous battle for the White House. Gellman utilizes previously unexamined archival material, FBI records et cetera. The author makes clear that in his work, “Kennedy will not come out as a saint; his campaign was far more corrupt and ruthless than has been presented. Nixon
will not come out as the villain or the foil; he ran a far cleaner operation than has been described. While the extremes of white and black occasionally surface, this narrative is mainly colored in shades of gray.”
“Democratic Justice: Felix Frankfurter, the Supreme Court and the Making of the Liberal Establishment” by Brad Snyder. This is an extraordinary biography of a Jewish immigrant from Vienna who arrived in America in 1894 at age 11 and went on to become a renowned Harvard law professor, an adviser to presidents, and an associate Justice of the United States Supreme Court. As a brilliant young lawyer Frankfurter befriended Theodore Roosevelt, Henry Stimson, Louis Brandeis, and Oliver Wendell Holmes. As a law professor he secured for his top students (i.e., Dean Acheson) clerkships with Supreme Court justices and later top jobs in Franklin Roosevelt’s administration. Frankfurter, who served on the Supreme Court bench from 1939 until 1962, was not your typical knee-jerk liberal jurist. A proponent of judicial restraint, he believed that “the American
people should seek political and socioeconomic change not from the Supreme Court but from the democratic political process . [He] was extremely skeptical about judicial vetoes of state and federal legislation….” “Democratic Justice” is a big book—the narrative encompasses 710 pages—but it is a worthy read.
“Come On Man: The Truth About Joe Biden’s Terrible, Horrible, No Good, Very Bad Presidency” by Joe Concha. A longtime media and political columnist for “The Hill,” Contra makes the case that Biden “has been a guy who usually padded his resume, boosted his hard scrabble credibility and will say or do anything that is politically expedient.”
And thanks to accommodating journalists, Biden has gotten away with his mishaps and lies. Protecting Biden from scrutiny, Contra describes how the mainstream media has given little coverage to the disastrous withdrawal from Afghanistan, the crime surge in American cities, 2 million immigrants crossing our border, inflation hitting 40-year highs, 400 people a day dying from COVID-19, the opioid overdose crisis, and “his unsteady grip of the truth or reality.”
15 Blank Slate Media Newspapers, Friday, December 16, 2022
THE BACK ROAD
Letters should be typed or neatly handwritten, and those longer than 750 words may be edited for brevity and clarity. All letters must include the writer’s name and phone number for verification. Anonymously sent letters will not be printed. Letters must be received by Monday noon to appear in the next week’s paper. All letters become the property of Blank Slate Media LLC and may be republished in any format. Letters can be submitted online at theisland360.com/submit-opinion/ or mailed to Blank Slate Media, 22 Planting Field Road, Roslyn Heights, NY 11577. LETTERS POLICY
OUR TOWN
High fashion comes to the sneaker world
Well, men, if you are out and about and wondering what to get your wife for the holidays, the answer is usually simple. That is, if you have $2,500 to spare and live near the Miracle Mile. All you have to do is walk into Burberry’s, Louis Vuitton, Fendi or Gucci with a bewildered look on your face and you will promptly be approached by an extremely pleasant salesperson who will guide you toward the handbag area where upon you will be shown some exquisite looking luxury handbags and, voila, your decision-making is done.
But what if you’re a puzzled wife who is shopping for the man in your life and realize that he has more ties, shirts, scarfs and sweaters than he can possibly use. What to do? What to do? Your troubles are over because thanks to the ascendence of men’s fashion in America, you too can spend large sums of cash to adorn your man in the latest in sneaker apparel.
Welcome to the world of high-end, luxury sneaker fashion. For years I have been aware that certain entrepreneurial and enterprising young teens were engaged in buying and then selling the latest sneaker line of Air Jordans. But I was stunned to see how fashion houses were now in the serious business of designing and selling luxury sneakers for men. Or to put it more accurately, for
wealthy men.
I was prompted to write this column after walking through Neiman Marcus in the Roosevelt Mall last week and noticed some truly odd-looking, hand-painted sneakers with silver studs by Dolce & Gabbana. I turned them over to see the soles and there was the price tag for these beauties at the cost of $1,500. Wow! Things have changed since I was a kid and the only things available to buy were those black high-top Converse sneakers for $12.
DR. TOM FERRARO Our Town
To do more research, I went back up to the Miracle Mile in Manhasset and waltzed into Louis Vuitton with the naïve assumption that one of those friendly salespeople would be happy to chat with me about sneaker fashion.
Silly me, I should have known that since there is so much invested in LV branding, each salesperson is instructed to respond to a journalist’s questions with the line: “Why certainly, sir, I will be more than happy to get in touch with our PR corporate division and get back to you within a week or so.” Gee, thanks.
My next move was to exit stage left and saunter on down to Gucci and try my luck there. Naturally I put my camera, pen and pad away, walked in and asked where their men’s sneaker
EARTH MATTERS
department was. I was promptly escorted to the right place. The service in any of these high-end Miracle Mile stores is different than what occurs if you walk into Century 21. At Century 21 you feel lonely and lost, but in a luxury fashion store you feel happy, enchanted, accompanied, and very welcomed. Sometimes, actually frequently, they will offer you bottled water. At Gucci’s the salesperson was engaging and pleasant and answered all my questions.
At this point I was able to understand the categories of sneakers on display. Each luxury brand used their familiar logos. Louis Vuitton used the “LV” insignia. Gucci used that “GG” and the green and red stripes, Fendi uses “F” and Dolce Gabbana uses there famous “DG” But that’s only the beginning of the fun. They have sneakers for walking, sneakers for jogging and sneakers for evening wear.
In days gone by the only guys who would have had the guts to wear sneakers at all times were Howard Hughes and David Boies. But Hughes was the world’s richest man and David Boies is one of the nation’s most well-known, powerful and brilliant attorneys. In case you don’t recall, Boies was the guy who represented Al Gore in that Supreme Court case.
But now it seems that sneakers are
an in thing for almost all occasions. Or as the salesperson told me at Gucci: “There are no longer any rules in fashion.” That is if you have the cash or credit to spend on these sneakers. I think that enough money allows you to break any rule you want.
So, if you are a woman looking to buy your man something he certainly does not have yet, go out and buy him some high-end sneakers. They look good, seem to be fun to wear and are made to last with quality material. And one hopes that, unlike women’s handbags, these cute little puppies will not go out of style too quickly.
Which brings up another question regarding women’s fashion. How is it possible that each year the styles keep getting better, more interesting, and more appealing? It doesn’t seem possible for this to occur, but it seems to happen every year. The colors get better, the use of materials gets more unique, the way the stuff gets put together is more fun. This was a question I posed to one of the Gucci salespeople I spoke to.
I asked how fashion just keeps getting better and better every year. He paused, thought for a moment, smiled at me and said: “Isn’t it remarkable what the combination of money and creativity can do.”
I guess it is remarkable.
Wireless antennas and the rights of citizens
There has been a growing concern over the past few years in communities across Long Island regarding the deployment of new “small cell” wireless antennas designed to meet the expansion plans of the nation’s telecoms. The use of 5G technology requires close proximity to the user, and as a result some people are coming home from work to find an antenna sitting atop a telephone pole just outside their home.
Our phones can now do lots of amazing things, and people want to be fully connected at all times, in all places, but that kind of wireless connectivity doesn’t come without a significant risk. Residents, aware of media reports of wireless radiation harm, are showing up at town hall meetings in places like Flower Hill, Manorhaven, Upper Brookville and Lake Success demanding to be heard.
Ever since Samuel Morse figured out how to transmit patterns of electrical signals over a wire back in the 1830s, the quest for ever-faster and more flexible means of communications has driven amazing technological progress. Marconi invented the radio, Bell invented the telephone, his corporate progeny developed television, Steve Jobs gave us the personal computer, and in 1973, the Motorola company developed the DynaTAC 8000X, a wireless hand-held telephone that
could operate anywhere—if there was an antenna nearby.
Fast forward to today, and wireless technology can be used to stream movies while we walk the dog, wear a virtual reality headset out in the backyard, and allow giant 18-wheel trucks to barrel along an interstate at 70 miles an hour without a driver. Talk about progress!
But as I mentioned, there’s a risk to all this wireless technology, and local citizens are right to be concerned. It’s something the military has known since the very early days of radar: exposure to the radiofrequency (RF) radiation that is emitted from all wireless devices is not harmless. In fact, thousands of published, peer-reviewed studies have identified mechanisms by which exposure to RF radiation can cause biological harm, resulting in cancer, DNA and heart damage, as well as acute symptoms including headaches, nausea, dizziness, insomnia, memory loss and difficulty concentrating.
The massive deployment of new “small cell” wireless antennas in communities across Long Island transforms the issue of exposure from a personal choice (for instance, deciding to hold your cell phone against your ear for hours each day) to an involuntary one. When an antenna is placed just outside your home, you have no control over the radiation exposure which you and
PATTI WOOD Earth Matters
your family will receive 24/7/365, whether you use the service or not.
Studies show that children are much more vulnerable than adults to almost all kinds of environmental exposures, and RF radiation is certainly no exception. Their smaller bodies, thinner skulls, higher water content and rapidly developing physiology put them at much higher risk than adults. If your child’s bedroom happens to be near one of these new antennas, he or she will be exposed to the radiation all night while they sleep.
Well, you might say, certainly our federal agencies would not allow something potentially dangerous like that on the market without pre-market testing
and strict regulations. I’m sorry to say, you’d be wrong.
The human RF radiation exposure limits currently promulgated by the Federal Communications Commission were developed back in the 1980s, based on limited studies of rats and monkeys. At that time, the only concern was heat: how much RF radiation would it take to raise the body temperature of the animals? Believe it or not, that is still the standard we are living with today. It’s the standard for every phone, every antenna, every router and every VR headset. A thermal-only standard based on science from the 1980s.
There is no pre-market testing of phones or antennas. No government agency is monitoring the power output of the hundreds of thousands of antennas that have been deployed over the past few years in neighborhoods across the country. No government agency is testing the cumulative RF radiation levels in our school classrooms, where our children spend a large part of their waking hours. The Food and Drug Administration, which has the legal responsibility to set science-based standards for human exposure to RF radiation has actually never done so.
So, what can communities on Long Island and elsewhere do? There are three very important things every community can do: Adopt a protective code, adopt a protective code, and
adopt a protective code.
In the 1996 Telecommunications Act, which governs the deployment of all wireless technology in this country, Congress reserved for local communities the right to control how that deployment is managed. But communities don’t get those rights automatically. They get them through the adoption of a protective local zoning code.
The telecoms are fond of telling local politicians that their hands are tied, and that there is nothing they can do to stop a telecom from putting up its antennas wherever it wants. This is not true. The non-profit group Americans for Responsible Technology has a checklist of things every community could and should do to take advantage of the powers given to it by Congress.
While a good code can’t totally prevent the deployment of wireless antennas in every community, it can certainly give local officials the power to prevent the most egregious and hazardous placement of antennas, and force telecoms to prove that the locations they have chosen are the best and least obtrusive ones available.
Nobody is advocating going back in time, but there are safer and better ways to get connected than putting an antenna right outside someone’s home or apartment. You can bet that none of the telecom execs have antennas on their property!
16 Blank Slate Media Newspapers, Friday, December 16, 2022
PHOTO PROVIDED BY DR. THOMAS FERRARO
Wondering what to get your man for the holidays? How about these Burberry waterproof walking sneakers?
Dollars but no sense to gun violence epidemic
This week marked the 10th anniversary of the massacre of 20 sixyear-olds and their six teachers at Sandy Hook Elementary School.
President Biden attended what has become an annual Vigil for Victims of Gun Violence in Washington, D.C., last week — the first president to attend since Obama (Trump is the poster child for promoting gun violence).
Just this year alone there have been 622 mass shootings, which is more than two mass shootings each day. Guns are the highest cause of death for children in this country. But except for the gun legislation Biden managed to get through – the first in 30 years – significant legislation to address the gun violence epidemic has yet to become law on the following points: outright ban on assault weapons and high-capacity magazines; universal background checks; licensing/registration every five years; liability insurance; tougher red-flag laws. It’s harder to adopt a pet or vote (which is actually in the Constitution) than to purchase a weapon of war.
While we tend to focus only on the dead, we rarely consider the victims and survivors who add 100-fold to the numbers or to the calculation of actual cost –that is, beyond the immeasurable cost of pain, suffering, loss, intimidation, terror, impact to diminish rights of free speech, protest, assembly, fair elections — of coddling a gun industry and its lobbyists and enablers.
Let’s try to tally the costs.
The sum of $557 billion a year, ac-
cording to a study by Everytown for Gun Safety examining the direct and indirect costs from all gun violence in America, fatal and non-fatal.
The $557 billion each year includes everything from the immediate cost at a shooting, such as the police response, investigation and ambulance services, to the long-term health care costs, Eric Westervelt reported on the “All Things Considered” broadcast on NPR. It also includes things like a victim’s lost earnings, the price of mental health care and more. The report also tries to calculate seemingly less tangible and hard-to-pin-down costs. It estimates society loses some $1.3 billion every day for “suffering and lost well-being of gun violence to victims and their families.” The true annual figure is likely higher.
“This is honestly a very conservative estimate,” Sarah Burd-Sharps, research director at the gun control advocacy group, asserted. “It covers directly measurable costs. It doesn’t cover things like the trauma of children who don’t return to their school, the impact on businesses or on property values and taxes. It doesn’t cover any of those wider reverberations.”
It also doesn’t take into account the lost productivity, not only by losing a loved one, but the physical and mental injury to those who survive a shooting, and the cost to the family in losing that source of income and productivity, each year and for years, perhaps a lifetime afterward. That could be millions of dollars lost to that family.
Add to that $557 billion the billions
KAREN RUBIN View Point
of dollars spent each year to “harden” vulnerable targets – schools and college campuses, synagogues and churches, office buildings, government buildings, shopping malls, airports and transit hubs – with infrastructure and ongoing security. The school security industry alone has grown to $3.1 billion a year, an amount expected to grow at a rate of 8 percent annually.
All this to support a gun industry that racked up $70.5 billion in total economic activity in 2021, the National Shooting Sports Foundation is proud to claim. 2021 was the second highest year for gun sales, when 5.4 million Americans bought 18.5 million firearms. Smith & Wesson, alone, had $1 billion in sales, up from $520 million in 2020.
Americans make up 4 percent of the global population, but possess 46
MY TURN
percent of the guns in civilian hands. In 2018, there were 393.3 million weapons in American hands, which works out to 120.5 guns per 100 residents, making the United States the only country with more civilian-owned firearms than people, according to Bloomberg.
The number of guns has increased exponentially since 2018 to well over 400 million. Americans set the all-time record of 21 million guns purchased in 2020.
The biggest sellers have been assault weapons that the gun industry happily markets as putting in your hands a weapon built for war.
“The American gun industry has reaped an estimated $1 billion in sales over the past decade from AR-15-style guns, and it has done so by using and cultivating their status as near mythical emblems of power, hyper-patriotism and manhood,” the New York Times editorial board wrote this week, “America’s Toxic Gun Culture”
In 1994, when the assault weapons ban went into effect, there were some 1.5 million assault weapons in American civilian hands; today there are an estimated 25 million, with 4.5 million more just since the last survey, The Reload gun enthusiast publication excitedly reports.
“This is a truly significant figure that demonstrates – again – the popularity of this commonly-owned style of rifle,” Joe Bartozzi, NSSF President, said in a statement to The Reload. “The firearm industry responds to market demand and this shows that during the elevated period
of firearm sales that began in 2020, this particular style of rifle is the top choice for law-abiding citizens for hunting, recreational shooting and self-defense.”
“There are more MSRs [“modern sporting rifle”, is what the industry calls assault-style weapons] in circulation today than there are Ford F-Series trucks on the road.”
Mass shootings, far from quelling demand for guns, actually spur purchases from those concerned that lawmakers could enact gun-control measures, the FBI checks have shown repeatedly, Bloomberg reported.
Include in the dollars and no sense is the amount that gun rights groups spend on lobbying: a record $15.8 million in 2021 and $2 million in the first quarter of 2022, the transparency group OpenSecrets reported. “From 1989 to 2022, gun rights groups contributed $50.5 million to federal candidates and party committees,” the group found. “Of that, 99 percent of direct contributions went to Republicans.”
That’s a pittance – taxi fare – compared to the $70 billion in annual gun sales, so quite a ROI.
During the ban, the average number of deaths from shootings was at 4.8 per year, in the decade after, the number tripled, to 23.8 per year.
It is estimated that had the ban that had been in effect from 1994-2004 continued, the number of mass killings would have decreased by 70 percent.
Tell that to the survivors and victims, both past and future.
Librarians are also essential workers
During the Covid pandemic, we began calling certain jobs “essential”. These included physicians, nurses, ambulance drivers, EMTs, teachers, food delivery people, trash haulers, and others on the front line of service to the public. I would add librarians to this cadre.
Andrew Carnegie recognized more that a century ago that free public libraries were important places of congregation, education, and leadership.
Carnegie thought that access to information and knowledge would permit those from limited household circumstances to find advancement in careers and civic engagement.
That certainly was the case for me. I recall my mother taking me to the Mount Vernon, N.Y. Public Library for Saturday afternoon Children’s Hour of stories and to borrow books to read with me during the week.
Librarians are licensed professionals, experts in disseminating good information and ensuring that we can gain knowledge. They are crucial resources who not only encourage an appreciation for literature but also help communities strengthen their digital literacy skills and circulate credible information. Businesspeople and professionals as well as stu-
dents use the library, and seek the help of librarians, for research assignments.
According to a national report, “the American library … is a barometer of where we currently stand as a society when it comes to access to knowledge and information, as well as a catalyst for the enlightenment and coalescing of communities and individuals across the nation.”
However, against this backdrop of historical and contemporary acclaim for libraries and librarians, we see increasing instances of attempts at book banning and even book burning. In the year 2021-2022, PEN America found 2,532 instances of individual bans which covered 1,648 unique books in 138 school districts in 32 states, including Long Island.
In the past, such efforts were isolated and local.
Now, they are ideologically motivated and politically advantageous. Some of these campaigns simply compile lists of books whose subjects or authors, especially black authors, are deemed questionable without any evidence they were even read.
How can this be when so many cite the Biblical verse, “The truth will set you free”?
ROBERT A. SCOTT, Ph.D. My Turn
This verse means that the light of truth is the only reality. Lies, falsehoods, cheating, and deceptions may be someone’s reality, but that does not make them true. The library is a temple to truth.
Yet, it seems that increasing numbers of people question the expertise of librarians, just as they question the expertise of doctors and scientists.
None of these professions is infallible, of course. What sets them apart is that they are honor-bound to change their conclusions when new evidence is
discovered or uncovered.
For the librarian, this means curating as well as collecting and storing sources of information, whether on discs, in the cloud., or in books.
The Swedish designer, Josef Frank, has a wonderful quote about books. He said, “The world is a book, and the person who stays at home reads only one page.” The librarian is our travel guide to new vistas.
While is high school and college, I worked each summer at a public pool in Mount Vernon. For two days each week, I had the evening shift in the Pump House, meaning that I had only to test the water every hour.
As the pool was closed, except for an occasional kid who tried to hop the fence, I had uninterrupted time to read the books I had borrowed from the library.
I was interested in law and the librarian introduced me to Clarence Darrow and the book, “Attorney for the Damned.” I probably read around two-dozen books each summer on various topics.
In college, I worked in the library 20 hours per week, asking for the Saturday afternoon hours when in the fall most students were at the football game. This gave me quiet time to talk with the librarians and peruse the books on reserve for
classes in all subjects. (My schedule did not curtail my social life, however, as I went to the after-game parties. I just couldn’t discuss the heroic plays of my classmates.)
In the Navy, I borrowed books from the base library to catch up on reading that was not finished in college and to learn new topics. Never great in math, I remember studying calculus with material the librarian recommended.
At Adelphi, I realized that the librarian was a critical resource in curriculum and program development. The librarian was someone who could tell faculty and deans in different departments that they were considering the development of similar programs and could collaborate on the purchase of materials.
After retiring from Adelphi, I was a visiting scholar at the New York Public Library where the librarians helped me find books and articles for a book, and a book chapter, I was writing on university governance and leadership.
For these and so many more reasons, I think of librarians as “essential” to each of us as citizens and professionals. They deserve our respect and support.
Robert A. Scott is President Emeritus at Adelphi University
17 Blank Slate Media Newspapers, Friday, December 16, 2022 VIEW
POINT
Party with Nazis you are a Nazi
Anote to George Santos and the others who attended the Young Maga-Fascist Trumplican Cult “Gala” this past weekend in New York City – if you party with Nazis, you’re a Nazi!
Eric Cashdan Sands Point
Two O’clock in the Afternoon
On days like this when winter’s wind sweeps in my hopes can go astray.
Here the tranquil sunlight wraps us in its promise, and we sip tea with honey to sweeten the tongue.
No one bothers us, the tyranny of the week is gone. If the world wants to remind of its history of grievances the voice is muted. Tomorrow I’ll deal with my tempest in tea cup storms.
Bright crimson and white blossoms of geraniums fill the living room window. Petals fall onto the floor which I collect.
Down the street a traffic light turns red, if for a moment, dangling over another precipice.
I don’t know what the future holds, maybe now I don’t want to basking in the glow of conversation we two humans create for our use.
You say,“It’s clear, perfect. I understand fully.” I am content and say “Thank you.” How little is enough.
READERS WRITE
‘Torso Killer’ story omitted murder victim
This serial murderer, Richard Cunningham, known as “The Torso Killer,” committed horrific crimes and devastated the lives of many families. Our deeply felt sympathy is extended to the families of the victims.
Completely omitted from the Great Neck News report was the murder of Sheila Heiman by Cunningham in July 1973 to which he admit-
ted before the judge Dec. 5. Immediately Leon Heiman, her spouse, became the primary suspect in the murder investigation.
Mrs. Heiman left behind three young children, who were at summer camp when this horrific event occurred. For more than 30 years “Lee” Heiman lived with this shadow every day of his life. He passed away in 2004, never to learn the
truth. For the Heiman children it is relief for the final closure to the death of their mother and the total vindication of their father.
Now the news report can be more complete for other readers of the Great Neck News
Alan Altman Great Neck
Reparations for slaves not kosher
How disappointing to learn state Assembly members Taylor Darling and colleague Michelle Solgaes, who chairs the New York Black, Puerto Rican, Hispanic and Asian Legislative Caucus, wants Gov. Kathy Hochul and the state Legislature to fund a commission to study reparations for ancestors of slaves. It would be similiar to California Gov. Gavin Newsom’s Reparation Task Force that has been studying past racism. They estimate that California decedents of slaves are owed $569 billion. This makes no sense. It comes to $223,200 per individual. Our nation faces a $31.4 trillion, long-term national debt. California and local municipalities have a longterm debt of $1.6 trillion.
Since the passage of the 1964 Civil Rights Act, the private sector, along with city, state and federal government at all levels, have spent trillions under various programs which benefited African-American citizens. This included minority quotas for both employment hiring and admission to college, awarding of
contracts to Disadvantaged Business Enterprises, minority business mentoring programs, work place mentoring programs for promotion to higher positions and others.
Every glass ceiling in both the workplace and government was broken years ago. There are African-American CEOs of multibillion-dollar corporations, billionaires and millionaires. We elected Barack Obama president 14 years ago in 2008. California Sen. Kamala Harris was elected vice president, Antonio Delgado was elected New York’s lieutenant governor, Andrea Stewart Cousins serves as state Senate majority leader, Carl Heastie serves as Assembly speaker, Letitia James was elected state attorney general, David Dinkins and Eric Adams were elected NYC mayor, Jumanne Williams was elected NYC public advocate and Adrienna Adams was elected NYC Council speaker.
It has been common for decades to find African-American citizens holding senior management positions in government and business. There are 1.7 African-American million-
aires today. There is now a large, growing and prosperous African-American middle class.
My Jewish ancestors did not own any plantations and did not poison any slaves on Hebrew National Salami. They were too busy running away from the Cossacks and the pogroms.
Several African-American generations have benefited and grown since 1964. It is time to move on rather than go back over 157 years to relitigate the 1861-1865 Civil War. We have all grown to look beyond the color of a person’s skin, ethnic origin, religious beliefs, sexual orientation or age and accept each person for who they are today.
The late Civil Rights icon Rev. Martin Luther King Jr. said, “I have a dream that my four little children will one day live in a nation where they will not be judged by the color of their skin, but by the content of their character.”
Larry Penner Great Neck
We must name enemies on all sides
Reader Charles Schneider laments “missing” condemnations by local persons — including me — of Trump and his recent Jew-hating dinner guests. I cannot speak for the elected officials he mentions — nor can I be expected to personally issue press releases regarding my declarations and opinions as, at this moment, I am neither an elected official nor representing one.
That said, I have been contacted by several publications and electronic media and have said the following long prior to Mr. Schneider’s prompting:
Regrettably, while there were many positive outcomes of the Trump administration’s policies, we are paying a stiff price for them. Since the 2020 election, the former president has reverted to all manner of negative and irresponsible behavior for
which he was known. Included in his misconduct, now coming on the heels of false “stolen election charges,” incitement to violence, and so forth, is his participation in facilitating the normalization of antisemitism through the invitation of — and failure to dismiss — execrable Jew-haters from his dinner table.
Israeli politician and human rights activist Natan Sharansky has stated repeatedly that Jew hatred and general extremism cannot be arrested by one side shunning and condemning only the miscreants of the other side. It can only be so when all persons of both parties shun their own extremists as well.
I have not hesitated in condemning President Trump’s conduct since the 2020 election including this aforementioned dinner, Marjorie Taylor Greene, Matt Gaetz and a number of other nut
cases. I am still waiting for my Democratic locals to condemn Jew-hating Tlaib, Omar, AOC, the “Democratic Socialists” and the other detritus on the left.
Yes. All persons of decency should consistently condemn and work to defeat all leftist and alt-right extremists.
Finally, I recall a rally several years ago on the Village Green, organized when the jihadist-American ingrate Ilhan Omar — prompted the event with her gross attacks on Jews and Israel. At that time, the Democrats were in charge in Nassau and they all came to speak out against antisemitism— but would not utter her name.
We must know and name our enemies — not some of them, but all of them.
Jeffrey S. Wiesenfeld Great Neck
Blakeman governing from the fringe
Despite winning a razor-thin victory over a very effective incumbent, Laura Curran, Nassau County Executive Bruce Blakeman continues to approach his duties as if he had a mandate to ignore the majority of the electorate, which happens to be Democrats.
I am so disappointed by the comparatively low turnout by Dems in that election, which resulted in this unfortunate result, one that I hope will be corrected in the next election.
Meanwhile, we will have to endure his non-governance and silence in the wake of antidemocratic and antisemitic extremism, contin-
ued threat of Covid, and hostility to those who don’t agree with his MAGA point of view.
Roslyn Heights
18 Blank Slate Media Newspapers, Friday, December 16, 2022
Stephen Cipot Garden City Park
PHOTO BY STEPHEN CIPOT
Peter Block
Letters Continued on Page 43 For the latest news, visit us at www.theisland360.com
For a list of all locations in the tri-state area, visit:
THEBRISTAL.COM
Licensed by the State Department of Health. Eligible for Most Long Term Care Policies. Equal Housing Opportunity.
19 Blank Slate Media Newspapers, Friday, December 16, 2022
Girls clothing sought for Long Island charity
Ethical Friends of Children, a free shop for Long Island children in need, is requesting donations of girls’ clothing, sizes 2 to 5.
This outreach program, run and supported by the Ethical Humanist Society of Long Island in Garden City, assists more than 2,500 children and their families each year by providing them with clothing, backpacks for school and infant furniture.
The service is set up like a store so people can select what they want from a wide variety of clothes. “As we’ve set up our winter store, we are finding a gap in our supply of clothing for little girls,” says Ethical Friends of Children Director Jim LoPresti of Massapequa Park.
Ethical Friends of Children, established in 1985, is staffed entirely by volunteers and there is no charge for any services. Individuals, fami-
lies, or community groups donate gently used clothing and other things children may require, such as backpacks. Any cash donations go entirely towards the purchase of needed items for children, such as diapers and formula.
“Customers” are referred by many of the area’s social service organizations and are supported by both religiously affiliated and private agencies funded by Nassau and Suffolk Counties
Volunteers are always welcome to help sort, organize and deliver clothing and goods.
To volunteer or donate, please contact office@ehsli.org Or call the Ethical Humanist Society of LI at 516-741-7304.
People can also make a monetary contribution to EFC through https://www.ehsli.org/ social-action/ethical-friends-of-children/
20 Blank Slate Media Newspapers, Friday, December 16, 2022
COMMUNITY NEWS
Opportunity is Knockin’! BlankSlate MEDIA www.theisland360.com Roslyn Times Williston Times Port Washington Times Herald Courier Great Neck News Manhasset Times NEW HYDE PARK
YOUR GUIDE TO THE ARTS, ENTERTAINMENT AND DINING
BOLLYWOOD ACTOR’S
N. SHORE HOMECOMING
BY STEVEN KEEHNER
When Prashantt Guptha and his wife Mansi returned to Manhasset this summer from Mumbai, India, he explained that the relocation was necessary for his family.
During his 15 years in India, he appeared in over 12 films, two web series, four short films and several commercials. Yet he said a “ray of hope” awoke when he and his wife agreed on the move despite once hesitating to return.
“In Mumbai, I reached a point of extreme anger over the pollution and infrastructure, the education system and overall feeling small on my full potential,” said Guptha. “I felt New York would break the shackles and allow me to explore multiple facets of my life, eventually land my wife a deserving job once she has her working papers in a few months and place my kids in a beautiful academic community. And was I right or what? What an amazing community to be a part of.”
Guptha’s father, Kedar, first came to New York in 1974 in search of the American dream. The next year he would found Quintessence Jewelry Corp., which is now based in Great Neck Plaza.
Guptha, whose real name is Prashant Kumar Gupta, was born on May 27, 1982, in Queens. He decided he wanted to be a movie star during his senior year of high school and enrolled in his first acting class.
“As supportive as my father had been of my cinematic pursuits, he advised me to attend a business college as a backup plan as opposed to a perfor-
mance and theatrical university,” he said. “Frankly, I treated my college years as a formality to get a degree in finance, which in those days seemed like the safe and standard thing to study along with accounting.”
Every week he would complete his classes in three days and spend the other two weekdays attending acting workshops. He also met his now wife, who is from Mumbai, at Baruch College during this time.
“We continued to live in
Manhasset and moved to Mumbai in 2007 with our firstborn in hand so I could start the pursuit of my Bollywood Dreams,” said Guptha. “Meanwhile, my wife played every role from homemaker, raising two kids, a certified teacher, a dessert chef and HR consultant. Truly a multi-talented lady.”
After relocating, he landed his first break with a cameo appearance in a film produced by Rajshri Productions. What followed was several tough years.
But he eventually landed a role in “Neerja” (2016), which
was produced by 20th Century Fox’s Indian division. Guptha said the film gave him exposure and that despite his brief role it was crucial to the story.
“A brief part in a huge film will do you more good than a lead role in a film that may never see the light of day,” he said about the experience.
Following “Neerja,” he appeared in several other projects. These included “The Tashkent Files,” a Disney web series called “Special Ops” and his self-described biggest hit, a recent web series called “Aash-
ram.”
But the film closest to his heart is “A New Christmas” (2019), his first and so far only international film. He explained that the English feature film arose from a desire to establish a presence in the West and tell an ethnic Christmas story.
“In 2018, my producer partner, Rashaana Shah, and I met to discuss an ultra-lowbudget feature film that we absolutely had to make,” said Guptha. “We knew we couldn’t exceed $150,000, I would be
the lead, we’d shoot in New York and we had to complete it in 12 days.”
Guptha plays Kabir, a lonely medical student in New York who is estranged from his wife and mourning the death of his mother. When he meets Kioni, a charming Kenyan film student, she persuades him to show her the city’s Christmas decorations. This leads him to rediscover the magic of the holiday season and reclaim his life.
They shot the film at the Manhasset LIRR station, on the train, at his home and at an Airbnb in Glen Cove and Manhattan.
“This film is dearest to my heart because I’ve always loved Christmas and holiday movies,” said Guptha. “And now I was the star and producer of one.”
When the final copy was completed, he sold it to a Los Angeles-based distribution company. The film became eligible for a New York State tax credit and was accepted to over 15 film festivals. One can watch it on Amazon Prime.
Guptha is now looking to complete more films under his company Mulberry Films. He also wants to work with the Nassau County Film Commission to bring more Bollywood projects to his new home.
“I’d love to see South Asians like myself rise in mainstream entertainment, be it news, media, theatre, commercials, film or TV,” he said. “In fact, I feel so loyally attached to Manhasset that I dream of seeing it as a popular shooting location and all of Long Island growing in terms of its fame and presence across America. I, for one, would love to be a torchbearer of that.”
BLANK SLATE MEDIA December 16, 2022
PHOTO COURTESY OF PRASHANTT GUPTHA
Prashantt Guptha and his first feature film poster, “A New Christmas.” He appeared in over 12 films, two web series, four short films and several commercials during his 15 years in India.
22 Blank Slate Media Newspapers, Friday, December 16, 2022 elliman.com © 2022 DOUGLAS ELLIMAN REAL ESTATE. EQUAL HOUSING OPPORTUNITY. 110 WALT WHITMAN ROAD, HUNTINGTON STATION, NY 11746. 631.549.7401. Wishing you a beautiful holiday and a happy new year! Call me for all your real estate needs. Maureen Polyé Licensed Real Estate Salesperson O 516.627.2800 | M 646.239.0769 maureen.polye@elliman.com Unwrap a Happy and Healthy Holiday Season EVENTS ARE BACK! Submit Your Events TODAY with our simple add event form then let us create you a ticketed page automatically from the event submission workfow. #Exciting Promote all your events via our network of 5000+ events calendars, listing sites, email and print services. 60 seconds to create, ticket and promote your event, so what are you waiting for! PROMOTE YOUR EVENTS TODAY AT https://theisland360.com/local-events/ the island 360 LIKE US ON FACEBOOK AT FACEBOOK.COM/ THEISLAND360 AND FOLLOW ON TWITTER: @THEISLAND360
Executive Orders 4 gifts for the busy professional on your holiday list Green Giving Eco-friendly gift ideas Gifting Ideas for budget-conscious families A Blank Slate Media Special Section December 16, 2022
Experiential gifts gifts for seniors
Holiday shoppers know that, seemingly every year, there’s one person on their shopping list who’s hard to shop for. Seniors may fit that bill, as many have already accumulated a lifetime’s worth of goods and gadgets. That’s why experiential gifts can be such a good fit for seniors come the holiday season.
Experiential gifts are wildly popular. In its 2021 Winter Holiday Shopping Report, the market research firm Mintel revealed that nearly half of individuals surveyed for the report felt that experiential gifts are superior to tangible items. Seniors who already have everything they need might be even more enthusiastic about experiential gifts, which may encourage them to get out of the house or pursue passions they’ve long had a passing interest in. This holiday season, shoppers can consider these experiences as they look for something new and unique for the seniors on their shopping lists.
Biplane flight: Few experiences are as exhilarating as a flight in an open cockpit biplane. Biplane flights are unique to each company that offers them, but some planes can accommodate two passengers (in addition to the pilot), making this an ideal gift for senior couples who aren’t afraid of a bird’s eye view.
The length of a flight depends on shoppers’ budgets, but no matter how long seniors are in the air, they’re sure to return to the ground having enjoyed a truly unique experience.
Hot air balloon ride: If riding shotgun with a pilot in a tiny plane is more adventure than your favorite senior may be seeking, a hot air balloon ride may be more suitable.
Hot air balloon rides provide a truly stunning way to experience idyllic settings and a calm way to take to the skies on a beautiful day. Rides tend to last around an hour, but companies typically offer various packages and may even let shoppers customize rides for their loved ones.
Theatre tickets: The COVID-19 pandemic hasn’t been easy for anyone, but seniors were among the groups most vulnerable to serious infection if they caught the virus. As a result, many seniors strictly adhered to social distancing guidelines prior to getting vaccinated. Now that seniors are eligible to be fully vaccinated and even receive two rounds of booster shots, a trip to the theatre can reignite their passion for live entertainment and make for a memorable night out.
Cycling tour: Modern seniors are among the most physically active demographics. A 2020 study published in the Journal of Medical Internet Research found that, within months of the pandemic being declared, adults age 65 and older averaged 100 more minutes of physical activity than the next closest cohort. A cycling tour can make for a perfect gift to active seniors. Tours may be designed to visit local places of historical significance, idyllic natural settings or local eateries. Wherever the tours ultimately end up, they’re sure to put a smile on active seniors’ faces. Experiences can make for the perfect holiday gifts for seniors who have it all.
24
HOLIDAY GIFT GUIDE • Blank Slate Media Newspapers, Friday, December 16, 2022
Eco-friendly gift ideas for green giving green
Giving eco-friendly gifts is now easier than ever before. As more and more people are conscious of reducing their impact on the planet, the demand for environmentally conscious products and services has grown.
Choosing earth-friendly gifts is not only generous, but gift-givers also can rest assured they’re doing their part to safeguard natural resources for future generations. The following are some gift ideas for the eco-conscious people on your holiday shopping list.
Locally made products
Locally made products make great holiday gifts. Such gifts are not produced halfway around the world, meaning they don’t contribute to greenhouse gas emissions and global warming like products that need to be flown or driven across the globe. Craft fairs and artisan shops are good sources for locally made gifts, which also are a great way to support businesses in your community.
Gifts of service
A massage or music or tutoring sessions are examples of gifts of service. These gifts do not require much use of natural
resources, and recipients find their personal nature very thoughtful. Gifts of service also can include tasks you do yourself for the gift recipient, rather than paying another person to handle. For example, teach a senior member of your family how to navigate their new smartphone or agree to help them shop for groceries.
Recycled goods
When many people think of recycling, they tend to picture piles of discarded
plastic bottles, glass jars and aluminum cans. While the end product of many of these recycled pieces is new cans, bottles and jars, recycled materials also can be turned into new and unique pieces. Trivets and spoon rests made from recycled and melted wine bottles make for clever and attractive gifts. Recycled fire extinguishers have been turned into vases, and you can even find bike parts that have been used to make wind chimes and belts if you know where to shop.
Natural gifts
Natural gifts are among the most environmentally friendly ones you can give. Foodies may appreciate an herb-growing kit that enables them to experiment with freshly picked basil or thyme in the kitchen, while tree-growing kits and flower seed packets are nice stocking stuffers for budding gardeners. Offer to purchase a living Christmas tree for a relative, so that he or she can plant the evergreen after the holidays have come and gone.
Antiques
New, shiny gifts are not the only ones that have appeal. Gifting a sentimental piece of family history is an earth-friendly way to share the holidays. Pass down a cherished piece of jewelry or, if you do not have anything in your own collection, browse antique shops for items that have interesting histories.
The holiday season is often a time of excess, but giving doesn’t have to be detrimental to the environment. Givers can seek out earth-friendly gifts and share even more this time of year.
25
Music lessons and other gifts of service do not require a great deal of natural resources, making them ideal eco-friendly gifts.
Blank Slate Media Newspapers, Friday, December 16, 2022 • HOLIDAY GIFT GUIDE
Flowers Say It All…
FLOWERS | GIFT BASKETS Serving the Community for Over 60 Years
What to get What to get for the family beach bum beach bum
Sandy beaches and the sounds of waves lapping against an idyllic shoreline may not be the first images people think of during the holiday season. But the beach is never far from a beach bum’s mind, and that’s something holiday shoppers can keep in mind as they look for perfect gift for loved ones who can’t wait to dip their toes in the sand.
If the weather outside is frightful, these beach-themed gifts can be just what beach lovers want to see under the tree this holiday season.
Beach shade/tent: Beach shades and tents can make a day at the shore that much more enjoyable by protecting beachgoers from the sun. Many beach shades and tents offer significant sun protection, making them the perfect places to look to for a riverside or oceanfront nap. Shades and tents also provide a welcome respite from the sun while eating or reading summer’s must-read novel.
Beach hammock: Individuals or couples who want to take beach napping to the next level would undoubtedly appreciate a beach hammock. A beach hammock strung between two palm trees is the stuff tourism brochures are made of. When shopping for beach hammocks, look for one with durable tree straps and an attached bag that makes setup and takedown a snap.
Sand-free towel: Perhaps the only nuisance of spending a day at the beach is bringing sand home with you. Enter the sand-free beach towel. Sand-free towels are typically made with microfiber that
prevents sand from accumulating on them. That helps beachgoers ensure sand on their towels doesn’t make it to their cars and homes.
Foldable blanket: A foldable blanket folds up and zips into a tiny rectangle and makes for the perfect place to enjoy a picnic at the beach. Foldable blankets that can be zip-closed can fold up into the size of a small pillow, making them highly popular among beach lovers who are accustomed to serving as sun-soaked sherpas each time they visit the beach. Sand-free fabrics make these ideal for people who want to leave the sand behind when it’s time to go home.
Beach wagon: Beach wagons make getting from the car to the sand with your gear in tow that much easier. Collapsible wagons can fold up and fit easily into vehicle trunks when not in use. Depending on the size of the wagon, it may be able to carry more than 100 lbs. of cargo, including beach chairs, coolers, towels, and more.
The weeks between Thanksgiving and New Year’s Day might not be peak beach season, but it’s a great time to find items that can make beach lovers’ trips to the beach that much better.
26
HOLIDAY GIFT GUIDE • Blank Slate Media Newspapers, Friday, December 16, 2022
27 ** Blank Slate Media Newspapers, Friday, December 16, 2022 • HOLIDAY GIFT GUIDE
How to gift the people who aren’t family who aren’t
Come the holiday season, many people find it’s not just family and friends on their shopping lists. Coworkers and acquaintances often land on such lists as well, and it’s not always easy deciding what to get those people who aren’t close friends or family members.
Boss
Gifting the boss is a sensitive subject and should be dictated by company protocol. If you are the only employee to buy your boss a gift, it may seem like you are trying to curry favor. However, if everyone else is gifting and you fail to offer a gift, you may be caught off guard. Some business etiquette experts say that it is customary for bosses to give gifts to employees but not the reverse. However, employees who are especially close with their bosses or who work closely with them each day may want to offer a small token of appreciation. When selecting gifts for bosses, do not give anything too personal, such as clothing, perfume or jewelry. Food or gift cards are a safer bet. Experts say a gift in the range of $10 to $25 is adequate. Chipping in for a gift with other employees may be the best course of action so you don’t inspire resentment among coworkers.
Babysitter or nanny
Caregivers play important roles in the lives of children. Once you have found a sitter or nanny who you trust, you want to ensure you
keep that person content. If you regularly use a nanny or sitter, money is always a great gift. For a full-time nanny, one week to one month’s pay is adequate. For a regular sitter, consider a gift equal to two nights’ pay.
Coach or club leader
Children today are involved in many different activities, and chances are parents’ schedules are filled with sports games and practices. A small gift of $10 to $20 can show your appreciation to a coach or club leader. This is another instance when it might be nice to pool your resources with fellow parents to purchase one large gift.
Mail carrier
If your mail is delivered by the same mail carrier week after week, you may want to spread some holiday joy. Mail carriers have an extra workload during the holidays, when they are tasked with delivering packages and greeting cards in addition to more routine mail. Civil servants may be forbidden from receiving cash. In such instances, a gift card makes a great gift.
Trash collector
Hauling garbage is neither an easy nor glamorous job. Many garbage collectors appreciate a tip for their hard work. Take notice of who collects the trash from your home. If it is the same people each week, take the time to personally deliver an envelope with a small tip of around $20.
28 HOLIDAY GIFT GUIDE • Blank Slate Media Newspapers, Friday, December 16, 2022
29 Blank Slate Media Newspapers, Friday, December 16, 2022 • HOLIDAY GIFT GUIDE
Certain people feel right at home in the great outdoors. With the sun on their faces and the wind in their hair, rock scramblers and kayaking buffs simply can’t get enough of being outside in the elements.
Outdoor enthusiasts need reliable gear to make their experiences that much more enjoyable. Brandon Gaille Small Business & Marketing Advice reports that $230.6 billion was spent worldwide on sportswear and outdoor apparel in 2021. However, there’s always room to improve on adventures large and small, and holiday shoppers can keep these
items in mind as they look for items for their favorite nature lover this season.
• Plasma lighter: A plasma lighter can start fires in conditions that aren’t conducive to other fire-starting measures. Plasma lighters are water- and wind-resistant and work in nearly all weather conditions. Saberlight even makes a rechargeable option with USB charging cable.
• Lantern: Outside magazine recently named the BioLite AlpenGlow 250 as its new favorite road trip item. It can be used in a variety of settings, including inside a
tent or at a hunting cabin, and produces customizable illumination.
• Backpack cooler: Yeti is known as a leader in coolers, and the Yeti Hopper Backflip Soft Cooler makes carrying food and beverages even more convenient. This product is a backpack and a cooler, so it’s a hands-free and portable option when out in nature.
• Hiking socks: Keeping feet cool and comfortable is essential on hiking trips. Injinji socks are made from CoolMax fibers that help provide a blister-free wilderness experience designed to minimize friction.
• Waterproof backpack: Whether a loved one spends time in or near the water or just wants to safeguard his or her belongings in inclement weather, a waterproof backpack is the ideal outdoor gift. It’s easy to clean and keeps items inside dry. IDRYBAG Waterproof Backpack is
one to consider.
• Lightweight sleeping bag: Maybe someone’s sleeping gear needs an overhaul? Enlightened Equipment offers an 850-fill, zero-degree sleeping bag that is warm, but only weighs 1.5 pounds. That helps free up space and lessens hikers’ loads when carrying gear on the trail.
• Power bank/solar charger: Many people can’t live without their devices, even when out in the great outdoors. Since you can’t plug a phone into a tree, a portable solar charger and power bank is key. The BioLite SolarPanel 5+ comes with its own built-in battery, so a person can capture the sun’s rays during the day and save some power reserves for charging after sunset.
These are just a few of the innovative items that can appeal to outdoor enthusiasts on your holiday shopping list.
30
Gifts for people who love the great outdoors $230.6 billion was spent worldwide on sportswear and outdoor apparel in 2021 • Plasma lighter • Lantern • Backpack Cooler • Hiking Socks • Waterproof backpack • Lightweight sleeping bag • Power bank/solar charger LIKE US ON FACEBOOK AT FACEBOOK.COM/THEISLAND360 AND LIKE US ON TWITTER: @THEISLAND360 Gifts for people who love the great outdoors great outdoors HOLIDAY GIFT GUIDE • Blank Slate Media Newspapers, Friday, December 16, 2022
31 Nassau County’s Premier Pottery Studio 315A Willis Avenue, Mineola, NY 11501 516-493-9490 •www.islandpotterystudio.com All work is made on Long Island and is one of a kind Artisinal pottery for gift giving or serving HANDMADE POTTERY for the perfect gift Gift for Pottery 14 YEARS IN A ROW Email: oldcandy@aol.com •HOLIDAY HOURS: Mon.-Sat. 7:30-5, Sunday 9-5, Christmas Eve 8-5 Stocking Stuffers Headquarters Wax Lips, Candy Buttons, Astro Pops, Black Jack Gum & Fizzles? Bonomos Turkish Taffy, Dubble Bubble, BB Bats, & Fruit Stripe Gum? Zotz, Nik-L-Nips, Regal Crown Cherry Sours & Necco Wafers?… Slinky, Wooden Tops, Duncan YoYos, Jacks & the Booby Trap Game? “Spaldeens”, Gyroscopes, Wacky Packs, Bozo & Howdy Doody? SERVING THE COMMUNITY FOR OVER 76 YEARS! Come visit our “General Store” filledwithover 1600 retro candies and toys…and see why we were voted: Blank Slate Media Newspapers, Friday, December 16, 2022 • HOLIDAY GIFT GUIDE East Williston Florist We specialize in weddings,get-well soon,graduation, baby & wedding showers,funerals,etc. ORDER YOUR FLOWERS FOR ANY OCCASION! Have a Festive Holiday Season with our Beautiful Holiday Arrangements! 79 East Jericho Tpke., Mineola, NY 11501 1-800-4florist 516-742-9129 eastwillistonflorist.net • Floral Bouquet • Centerpieces • Plants • Gift Baskets & more…• WeDeliver
4 gifts 4 for the busy professional on your holiday list list
The life of a successful professional can be hectic. Demands at work force many professionals to work long hours, and those days could be even longer for remote workers. In fact, a 2020 study of 2,800 workers by the staffing firm Robert Half found that 70 percent of workers who transitioned to remote work due to the pandemic now work on the weekends. The survey also found that 45 percent of workers indicate they now routinely work more hours during the week than they did prior to the pandemic.
With so much on their plates, busy professionals may not have time to shop for products that can make their lives a little easier. That makes the holiday season a perfect time for people to consider what to get the hardworking professional on their shopping list. These four gifts can each make it easier for busy professionals to handle long days at the office.
1. Portable phone charger
Modern professionals rely on their smartphones to check and send work emails, keep track of their busy schedules and answer calls from colleagues, among other things. But those phones are only useful when their batteries are charged. Portable phone chargers are lightweight and easy to use, making them ideal for on-the-go professionals who need to keep their phones charged all day long. Professionals who spend lots of time in their vehicles may love a solar-powered portable charger, which ensures their phone batteries stay charged even when they forget USB cables at home.
3. Cleaning service
Few chores are less appealing after a long day at the office than cleaning a house. Many cleaning services offer weekly or monthly packages, and professionals would undoubtedly appreciate someone taking this time-consuming task off their to-do list. Ask a relative or two to pitch in and help pay for the service if it’s beyond your budget.
2. Wireless headphones
Though some models can cost of hundreds of dollars, a reliable set of wireless headphones can be found for as little as $50. These headphones can be especially useful for professionals who work from home, as many are designed to cancel out ambient noise, making it easier to participate in Zoom calls or other meetings even if the kids are being rowdy right outside a home office door.
4. Slow cooker
Slow cookers allow users to put everything in a pot in the morning and then arrive at night to a readyto-eat, homecooked meal. These can be especially valuable to professionals who work long hours and don’t have the time to prepare a meal from scratch at the end of a workday.
Whethers it’s portable tech, some help keeping their homes clean or a device designed to simplify homecooking, various gift ideas can help make busy professionals’ lives a little less hectic.
32
HOLIDAY GIFT GUIDE • Blank Slate Media Newspapers, Friday, December 16, 2022
Gift to get kids off the couch
screens and encourage kids to be more physically active.
Lessons: Whether it’s surfing, boating or music lessons, various courses do not require devices or even allow them to be used during sessions. Parents and loved ones of children can look for lessons that inspire youngsters to pursue a new passion that promotes physical activity and encourages kids to get up and go.
Devices can be hard to ignore.
Seemingly always within arm’s length, devices such as tablets and smartphones are as popular as ever. In a survey designed to gauge smartphone ownership, the Pew Research Center found that 85 percent of Americans owned a smartphone in 2021. That reflects a significant increase since 2011, when 35 percent of Americans owned a smartphone.
Adults may recognize the potential pitfalls of spending too much time on their devices, but those pitfalls are not nearly as apparent to children. For instance, a 2021 study published in the journal Frontiers in Psychiatry found that excessive smartphone use is associated with various health problems in adolescents and young adults. Such issues include psychiatric, cognitive, emotional, medical, and brain changes. A separate 2021 study published in the International Journal of Eating Disorders found that children have a 62 percent greater risk of developing a binge-eating disorder for each additional hour they spend on social media.
Parents know that gettings kid to put down their devices is no small task. However, the holiday season can be the perfect time to find fun gifts for kids that have nothing to do with
Trampoline: Aunts and uncles should definitely clear this one with mom and dad before purchasing it. However, no kid, including tweens and newly minted teenagers, can resist a good trampoline. Modern trampolines are safer than yesterday’s models, especially when shoppers choose ones with enclosures that prevent kids from falling off the trampoline and onto the hard ground below.
Sports equipment: Organized sports instill lessons about sportsmanship, hard work, overcoming adversity, and the value of working as a team, all the while promoting physical activity. Young children who haven’t yet participated in organized sports may be compelled to do so if a new baseball mitt or basketball hoop is waiting under the tree this holiday season.
Kites: Kites can be perfect for kids who don’t take to sports or those who simply need a break from competition. Kites can help young children develop their gross motor skills and instill in them a love of the great outdoors that lasts a lifetime.
Getting kids to put down their devices is no small task. But parents and loved ones can do their best by giving gifts that encourage kids to get off the couch and be more physically active.
33 Blank Slate Media Newspapers, Friday, December 16, 2022 • HOLIDAY GIFT GUIDE
Gifts for holiday hosts hosts
The season of entertaining is in full swing, with family, friends and coworkers gathering at various locales to enjoy some holiday spirit together.
When celebrating the holidays, it is customary to offer hosts a token of appreciation. During the season of giving, it may be challenging to find a gift that stands out in the crowd. However, some of the best gifts for hosts focus on their love of entertaining family and friends.
Music speaker: Music often is an integral part of entertaining, but not every party host is equipped with a stellar sound system. Today’s Bluetooth-enabled music speakers run the gamut from handheld options to speakers that combine mood lighting with sound to large units. Shoppers can find speakers that suit the space hosts have to work with and ones that won’t bust shoppers’ budgets.
Bar tools: Toasting the season (or any occasion) is par for the course at a party or get-together. Avid entertainers can benefit from having new bar tools, such as mixers and serving glasses, to make sure guests’ cups are never empty.
Party games: Keeping guests content often involves having plenty of beverages and food available. However, for the hosts who want to go above and beyond, game night or other entertainment-based
activities can add flair to special events. Board games, physical games (like horseshoes or bean bag tosses), games for video gaming systems, and even karaoke machines can fit the bill.
Cake stand or serviceware: Hosts may want to put foods on display, and a decadent cake stand or serving plate will make occasions more glamorous.
Spa gift certificate: Hosting can be hard work. After the guests have come and gone, hosts will no doubt need some time to rest and recuperate. This can be achieved more easily with a gift card to a nearby spa or massage therapist.
Cleaning service: The gift of a cleaning service saves hosts from having to do the post-party cleanup, and giving such a gift in advance of the party can be the helping hand hosts need as the chore list grows in the days before the party.
We wish you & your family a Joyful holiday season & a Healthy New Year
Herricks Teachers' Association
Working together for our students and with our community.
34
AV/Computer Technicians, Bus Drivers, Cleaners, Clerical Staff, Custodial Staff, Grounds Crew, Instructional Aides, Maintenance Staff, Monitors, Nurses, Secretaries, Teachers, Teaching Assistants, Technicians, Therapists, Transportation Staff
HOLIDAY GIFT GUIDE • Blank Slate Media Newspapers, Friday, December 16, 2022
Gifting ideas for budget-conscious families
The holiday season is a magical time of year when many people celebrate their faith and express their love and appreciation for their families. Such expressions are often made through the exchange of gifts, which can stretch families budgets.
Staying within budget is not impossible during the holiday season. It might take a little creativity and discussion among family members, but there are ways to exchange gifts and avoid debt this holiday season.
Embrace a “Secret Santa” exchange. Large families can save money by engaging in a Secret Santa exchange. Rather than asking each member of the family to buy gifts for one another, a Secret Santa exchange asks each participant to pick a name out of a hat and then only buy gifts for that person. This is a
Homemade items, such as those created by amateur woodworkers, often make for unique, thoughtful and inexpensive holiday gifts.
great way to save both money and time, and it saves participants from the potential hassle of returning gifts after the season.
Establish spending limits. Whether families embrace a Secret Santa exchange or not, they can save money by agreeing on a spending limit for each gift. Families participating in a Secret Santa exchange can set their spending limits a little higher than those families who will be buying gifts for multiple people.
Share experiences in lieu of exchanging gifts. Adults tend to be more difficult to shop for than children, as many adults can simply buy their own gadgets, clothing and other items commonly given during the holiday season. To save money, adults can forgo gifting traditional gifts to one another, instead
resolving to provide an experience for a loved one. Invite a loved one over for a homecooked meal or offer to take a family member out to dinner once the holiday season has come and gone and there’s more room in the budget.
Connect with your creative side. In lieu of purchasing a gift made by someone else, make your own gift. Skilled crafters can create a one-of-akind gift out of supplies they already have on hand, while woodworkers can follow suit. Such gifts are thoughtful and inexpensive, and they will likely prove more memorable than another video game or sweater.
Budget-conscious families don’t have to sit out of holiday gift exchanges, as there are plenty of creative ways to express your love and appreciation for family without breaking the bank.
35 IN NEW HYDE PARK LONG ISLAND 1809 LAKEVILLE ROAD,NEW HYDE PARK 516-354-4666 • WWW.OMEGADINER.NET DAILY LUNCH SPECIALS DAILY DINNER SPECIALS Available Everyday INQUIRE WITHIN SERVING BREAKFAST, LUNCHAND DINNER Wishing Our Customers a Joyous Holiday Season and a Happy New Year!! Thank you to all our customers for supporting us this year! OMEGA DINER OPEN 7DAYS AWEEK! CLOSED CHRISTMAS DAY -OPEN NEW YEAR’S DAY! SERVING DELICIOUS FOOD SINCE 1979! WE’RE OPENAND READYTO SERVE YOU! Just Stop In & Order or Call Ahead & Pick Up! Curbside Pick-Up and Take-Out Available YOUR INDOOR DINING WILL BE AS SAFE AS IT WILL BE ENJOYABLE!!
Blank Slate Media Newspapers, Friday, December 16, 2022 • HOLIDAY GIFT GUIDE
Get to know favorite wines for giving
• Cabernet Sauvignon: This is a fullbodied red grape heavily planted in the Bordeaux region of France. Cabernet generally has high levels of alcohol and tannins.
• Merlot: The smoothness and mild flavor of this red wine make it a great option for those who need an introduction to red wine. This wine is lower in tannins than Cabernet Sauvignon, and it tends to have a more fruity flavor profile as well.
• Cabernet Franc: This is a light- to middle-weight wine that features a high acid content and savory flavors.
• Malbec and Carménère: Similar to Merlot, these grapes originated in France but then made their way to other regions of the world. Malbec is most popular in Argentina, while Carménère is grown in Chile.
Chianti, which comes from the Chianti region in Tuscany, is made exclusively with Sangiovese grapes, or at least 80 percent of them and other blends.
• Chardonnay: This is a medium- to fullbodied dry white wine. The Chardonnay grape is a white grape from the Burgundy region of France.
• Sauvignon Blanc: Citrus-driven and often light-bodied, Sauvignon Blanc is another dry white grape planted widely in France. It also is a parent grape to Cabernet Sauvignon.
• Pinot Gris/Pinot Grigio: Pinot Grigio is a zesty, dry white wine that is particularly associated with Italy even though it originated in France, where it is thought to be a mutation of the Pinot Noir grape. Pinot Grigio skins are not green like other white grapes, but have a gray hue, hence the name.
Aglass of wine makes a nice accompaniment to a meal or something to enjoy and sip while conversing with friends in social situations. Many people have a favorite style of wine, and some even have a favorite vineyard. In addition, the popularity of wine makes it a versatile gift for the holidays or something to bring along to a holiday party as a hostess present.
Novice wine enthusiasts may be interested in learning more about wine so they can choose their wine selections for gifting and enjoyment more readily. According to the experts at Wine Enthusiast, learning to taste wine and differentiate between flavors is similar to appreciating art or music. Understanding the varietals can simplify the process of selecting wines.
• Zinfandel: Although mostly associated with the rosé wine White Zinfandel, Zinfandel is actually a medium-bodied red wine that originated in Croatia.
• Pinot Noir: Soft tannins and high acid give this light-bodied red wine its appeal. The grapes were first widely planted in France but can now be found elsewhere.
• Chianti: Chianti is the most famous Italian red wine in North America. It’s a dry red that pairs very well with food.
• Reisling: Those who prefer a sweet white wine can opt for Reisling, which can be traced to Germany. It can be a good match for those who appreciate other sweet white wines, such as Moscato or Gewürztraminer.
There are many wines to tempt palates. When gifting, the selections mentioned above can tempt foodies and budding sommeliers alike.
36
HOLIDAY GIFT GUIDE • Blank Slate Media Newspapers, Friday, December 16, 2022
Steps to take before giving pets as gifts
It’s not uncommon for families to welcome a new pet into their homes during the holiday season. Parents may give their children their first pet during the holidays, but those who choose to give a pet to someone outside their immediate family or to someone they don’t live with should consider the following advice before going through with that decision.
Consult the eventual recipient first
The element of surprise is part of what makes the holiday season of giving so special, and few things may inspire more enthusiastic responses than new pets under the tree. But however appealing you may find such reactions, it’s still best to first consult the intended recipient before buying or adopting the pet. Pets make wonderful additions to a home, but some people may be allergic to certain animals or simply not have the time or energy to devote to pet ownership. No one wants to return an animal to a kennel, and forcing a loved to take on the unwanted responsibility of pet ownership does not make much of a gift.
Let the recipient choose the pet
Aunts or uncles may think a cute puppy is an ideal holiday gift for their nieces and nephews, but it’s best to let those youngsters’ parents choose the pet rather than going it alone. Once mom and dad have given you the greenlight to gift their kids a pet, let them decide which type of pet will become the newest member of their households. Parents may not feel their children are ready to handle the significant responsibility of dog ownership, and they may prefer their
kids first receive a more low-maintenance pet, such as a fish.
Pay for everything
Pets are expensive, even those that are adopted from nearby shelters. Cats and dogs adopted from local shelters or even animals bought directly from breeders will need some immediate medical care, including shots and initial examinations at the veterinarian’s office, as well as food, dishes, leashes (if giving a dog), and bedding. When giving pets as a gift, men and women should fit the bill for these additional expenses, which can be significant. Recipients may not be able to afford these additional expenses, especially during the holiday season, nor did they ask to take on such a financial burden. So men and women giving pets as gifts should be capable of handling the oft-overlooked costs of adopting or buying a new pet.
Be willing to take the pet
Some households simply are not a good match for pets. Men and women looking to give pets as holiday gifts should be willing to take the pet into their own homes if things are not working out with the recipient. This does not mean giftgivers have to keep the pet forever, but they should be willing to temporarily care for the animal until it finds a new home.
Pets sometimes make wonderful gifts, but men and women who are considering giving pets as gifts this holiday season should not approach such gestures lightly.
37 Blank Slate Media Newspapers, Friday, December 16, 2022 • HOLIDAY GIFT GUIDE
38 HOLIDAY GIFT GUIDE • Blank Slate Media Newspapers, Friday, December 16, 2022
39 Blank Slate Media Newspapers, Friday, December 16, 2022
40 Blank Slate Media Newspapers, Friday, December 16, 2022 dd 1 10/30/2022 8:22:20 PM 980 Franklin Ave, Garden City CLIPPER TEMPLATE LEGAL CC2022 ndd 1 10/30/2022 8 22 20 PM www.grimaldisgardencity.com CLIPPER TEMPLATE LEGAL CC2022 indd 1 10/30/2022 8 22:20 PM (516) 294-6565 10/30 2022 8 22 20 PM Coffee, Tea, Soda • Mixed Green Salad/Caesar Salad Antipasto/Tomato & Mozzarella • Assorted Pinwheels One Large Calzone per Table (w/ Side of Sauce) Unlimited Pizza with Toppings $30 per person You may bring your own cake. There is a $5 cake cutting fee. All gratuity on party packages must be paid in cash. $32 pp: + Pasta Course $38 pp: + Chicken/Eggplant Entrée +$20 pp: Beer/Wine Package +$30 pp: Open Bar Package PARTY PACKAGES Grimaldi’s Gift Certificate Sale! CASH ONLY! GIVETHE GIFTOF SEASON! DELIVERY THROUGH: CL PPER TEMPLATE LEGAL CC2022 indd 1 10 30/2022 8 22 20 PM S M DINE IN, TAKEOUT & DELIVERY SUN - THURS 11:30AM-9PM FRI & SAT 11:30AM-10PM CL PPER TEMPLATE LEGAL CC2022 indd 1 10/30/2022 8 22 20 PM HOLIDAY FAMILY DINNERS ER TEMPLATE LEGAL CC2022 indd 1 10/30/2022 8:22:20 PM Book Any Party From Monday, December 5 – Thursday, December 22 Between The Hours Of 3:00 – 6:00pm And Receive 20% Off Your Total Bill .Offer Valid Monday Through Thursday Only! (2) 18 regular pizzas • Penne ala vodka • side order of meatballs • choice of a dozen buffalo wings or spinach artichoke dip • 2L bottle of soda HOLIDAY PARTIES *Additional items may be purchased at regular menu price. Toppings available for additional cost; may not be combined with any other coupon, discount, offer or Groupon; prices do not include tax or gratuity; available for take out only; no substitutions* CLIPPER TEMPLATE LEGAL CC2022 ndd 1 10 30 2022 8 22 20 PM And Receive 20% Off Your Total Bill .Offer Valid Monday Through Thursday Only! CLIPPER TEMPLATE LEGAL CC2022 ndd 1 10/30/2022 8 22 20 PM Available until January 1, 2023 for lunch and dinner. Takeout only. (2) 18” regular pizzas • Choice of a dozen buffalo wings or spinach artichoke dip • 2L bottle of soda (2) 18” regular pizzas • Penne ala vodka • Choice of a dozen buffalo wings or spinach artichoke dip • 2L bottle of soda (2) 18” regular pizzas • Penne ala vodka Side order of meatballs • Choice of a dozen buffalo wings or spinach artichoke dip • 2L bottle of soda *Additional items may be purchased at regular menu price. Toppings available for additional cost. May not be combined with any other coupon, discount, offer or Groupon. Prices do not include tax or gratuity. Available for takeout only. No substitutions.* Herald Courier Great Neck News Williston Times Port Washington Times Roslyn Times Manhasset Times NEW HYDE PARK
41 Blank Slate Media Newspapers, Friday, December 16, 2022
Overwhelming support for Toys for Tots drive
Nassau Veterans Memorial Coliseum was once again transformed into Santa’s workshop on Sunday, Dec. 4 as thousands flocked to Uniondale to support an event that has grown to become America’s largest one-day Toys for Tots drive.
As it has been since its inception, the 12th annual drive was spearheaded by Glen Cove businessmen Joe LaPadula and Jon Holzer of Martino Auto Concepts.
Featuring food trucks, music, plein air artists, family activities and more amidst hundreds of exotic and vintage vehicles, officials estimated that the event generated more than 166,000 individual donations were gathered, which will equip Toys for Tots in its 75th anniversary year to meet requests for assistance in Nassau County and throughout our region.
“During the holiday season, a toy can mean so much more than just being a gift under the tree — it can be a symbol of caring and a beacon of hope for brighter days in the future,” DeRiggi-Whitton said. “For the last 12 years, Joe LaPadula and Jon Holzer have worked so diligently alongside USMC Major (Ret.) Chuck
Kilbride to unite us in support of a cause that brings joy to so many deserving children and families in our region. For me, this event is one of the highlights of the holiday season, and I am eternally grateful to everyone for continuing to support such a crucial charitable mis-
N.Y. Islander players visit NYU Langone
In what’s become an annual tradition, members of the New York Islanders paid a pre-holiday visit to children at NYU Langone Hospital-Long Island in Mineola.
The marquee players signed autographs, and brought toys, Island-
ers’ pillows and blankets to cheer up patients at the NYU Langone Cancer Center for Kids and the pediatric unit at the hospital. The fan favorites included Mathew Barzal, assistant captain Josh Bailey, Ilya Sorokin, and Semyon Varlamov.
sion.”
Key sponsors of the 2022 Toys for Tots drive included: the U.S. Marine Corps; the American Academy of Hospitality Sciences; Gabrielli Truck Sales; First City Project; Bolla Market; Universal Autosports; Hunter Roberts
Construction Group; Long Island Sports Cars; Ryan Friedman Motor Cars; PCarMarket Automotive Enthusiast Marketplace; Ferrari Club of America Long Island Chapter; Race the North; Rally Point East; NYSpace Finders; RXR; Enterprise Rent-A-Car; Maserati Long Island; Porsche South Shore; Oyster Bay Property Management; Serendipity 3; Ferrari of Long Island; the Hofstra Motorsport Engineering Club, and an array of local automotive clubs and community stakeholders.
Nassau County Police Department officers, under the command of NCPD Commissioner Patrick Ryder, kept traffic moving briskly as a team of volunteers collected and sorted donations.
Members of the Glen Cove Fire Department provided additional assistance, and the Uniondale and Hempstead Fire Departments used their trucks to stage the American flag arch at the entrance of Nassau Coliseum.
There’s still plenty of time to support Toys for Tots this holiday season. Visit toysfortots. org to find a drop-off location near you or to make a monetary donation.
Menorah lighting in Manhasset
North Hempstead Supervisor Jennifer DeSena, the Town Board, the Chabad of Manhasset, and the Manhasset Park District will be hosting a Hanukkah festival on Sunday, Dec. 18 starting at 3 p.m. at Mary Jane Davies Green in Manhasset.
The event, which is sponsored by North Shore University Hospital at Northwell Health, will feature musical performances including a performance by the Manhasset High School band, live ice carving of a menorah, a chocolate gelt drop with assistance from the Manhasset-Lakeville Fire Department, and the lighting of the menorah.
“This event has become a wonderful annual tradition to celebrate together as one community,” said Rabbi Mendel Paltiel of the Chabad of Manhasset.
Hanukkah, which runs this year from Sunday, Dec. 18 to Monday, Dec. 26, celebrates the rededication of the
Holy Temple in Jerusalem, when it is said that one day’s worth of sacred oil lasted for eight days.
Mary Jane Davies Green is located on Plandome Road across from Town Hall at 220 Plandome Road in Manhasset. Parking will be available in the Town Hall parking lot and in a portion of the Manhasset Park District’s lot behind Mary Jane Davies Park.
For more information, please call 311.
Cost of Medicare goes down
BY BARRY KLITSBERG, Nassau County Medicare counselor, FCA
For those of us who are enrolled in the Medicare program, there is good news on the horizon. Medicare has made significant changes to its premiums and deductibles, lowering the cost to the beneficiary. While the cost of just about everything has gone up, the monthly Medicare Part B premium has been reduced for the first time this century, from $170.10 to $164.90, for a yearly saving of $62.40.
What’s more, the Medicare Part B deductible has gone down from $233 per year to $226. These two reductions have broken a string of yearly increases. Medicare Part B generally covers medically necessary services, that is, services or supplies that are needed to diagnose or treat your medical condition and that meet accepted standards of medical practice. Part B also covers a wide range of preventive services from shots to screenings to prevent illness (like the flu) or detect
it at an early stage, when treatment is most likely to work best. In addition, due to the passage of the Inflation Reduction Act, Medicare will finally be able to negotiate prescription drug costs directly with pharmaceutical manufacturers.
While this section of the law doesn’t go into effect until 2025, in the interim, beneficiaries who are insulin dependent can have their insulin costs capped at $35 per month. This
can save hundreds of dollars a month. Also, the Inflation Reduction Act calls for out-of-pocket prescription expenses to be capped at $2,000 annually. In order to determine which type of plan works best for you, you should call the Nassau County Health Insurance Information Counseling and Assistance Program, HIICAP hotline.
This is a free service that will guide you to the best plan for you. We have no affiliation with insurance companies, agents or brokers.
Our number is 516-485-3754. While we are quite busy during Medicare Open Enrollment Season, we strive to return every call on our voice mail within two working days, and usually call sooner. FCA can help. Answers to your Medicare questions are just a phone call away.
Barry Klitsberg is an assistant Health Insurance Information Counseling and Assistance Coordinator at FCA in Garden City and an Aging Services Program Specialist at the US Department of Health and Human Services.
42 Blank Slate Media Newspapers, Friday, December 16, 2022 For the latest news, visit us 24 hours a day, 7 days a week at www.theisland360.com
COMMUNITY NEWS
PHOTO COURTESY OF NYU LANGONE
READERS WRITE
G.N. should stick to suburban roots as it grows
Great Neck’s elected officials are united in a vision for how to improve Great Neck: transform it into a high-density urban area to create strong foot traffic for local struggling businesses.
It’s questionable if those who moved to Great Neck because of good public schools will be willing to risk school overcrowding for the sake of more good restaurants on MNR. It’s questionable if those who bought single-family houses in a quiet suburb will be welcoming apartment houses next door just to have a shopping center on the corner.
We have a couple of excellent restaurants in Great Neck and we can drive 10 minutes down to Northern Boulevard in Manhasset or Little Neck to get more. We also can order DoorDash. We live only 15 minutes away from Americana Manhasset. And Amazon deliveries are working well, too.
I understand that it’s a problem for owners of commercial real estate on Middle Neck Road and I wish them good, but not that I’m ready to pay the price for it in high taxes, overcrowded schools, traffic, etc.
While tax-exempt apartment buildings are a profitable solution for poor commercial real estate investments, they are also a very heavy burden for the community that sits on a peninsula with only two narrow roads connecting it with the highway. It’s a heavy burden for a community that drinks water from underground wells. It’s a heavy burden for a community with a suburban sewage system and a limited stormwater capacity.
Are we ready to build new schools, connect our water supply to NYC pipes, invest in urban sewage and wastewater management and widen our streets — all extremely expensive projects? I hear people complaining about high taxes, but suddenly we want to pay even more just to get new restaurants in town. Are we really ready to sacrifice the quality of suburban life, including award-winning schools, for the sake of a shopping spree not farther away than a five-minute drive? Or are these developers and commercial property owners who push for it?
Saying this, I agree that Great Neck needs transformation, a push to move forward, to attract youth, to shine. But I disagree that shine comes from restaurants or shopping malls. We need to think about how to make the town more attractive for youth, how to make it more affordable, how to ease traffic jams, and how to bring more foot traffic to the businesses. The answer to all these questions is in making the town more bike-friendly with protected bike lanes. More and more bikers park at the train station and many school children bike, too. Families could bike to ice cream shops and to the playgrounds. But only if they feel safe on the streets. Protected bike lanes would be an excellent solution for the peninsula one can cross on a bike in 20 minutes.
We need to think about how to
bring businesses that are needed to the diverse town population and are not limited to shops and restaurants that are suffering from online competition and from the local segmented food market. Our town is very much education and family-centered. We
need child care, both daycare and after-school center. Parents drive kids to Little Neck and Roslyn for afterschool and enrichment. We maybe need more sports clubs and entertainment, and I think the STEM center would be great. (If nothing works, I’m
happier with status quo than with a ruined town. Great Neck is desirable and homestead values are up thanks to the No. 1 school district.)
Most of all we don’t need nine villages with nine town halls, nine mayors, nine sets of trustees, nine village
clerks, nine building inspectors, nine secretaries, and nine tax entities. Especially not if all nine of them start building apartment houses.
HAPPY HANUKKAH
43 Blank Slate Media Newspapers, Friday, December 16, 2022
FROM THE PUBLISHER & STAFF OF BLANK SLATE MEDIA
Kate Goldberg Great Neck
Business&RealEstate
How Fair Housing laws actually work
In the United States everyone is entitled to purchase a home who is gainfully employed and has adequate income, credit, and debt-to-income ratios to qualify under the Fair Housing Act. However, discrimination and ownership disparity still occurs and exists between white and black households as per an article by The National Association of Realtors back on March 3. Here is a link to the article, which explains in greater depth the housing disparity among white and minority groups: https://www.nar.realtor/ blogs/economists-outlook/racial-disparitiesin-homeownership-rates
According to the article, Black homeownership has increased to 43.3% but is still lower than it was 10 years ago. Moreover, Hispanic and Asian households have increased their holdings drastically over the last decade through 2020.
Banks have been a sore spot for fair housing laws through the Department of Housing and Urban Development Administration. Some lenders have and, in some instances, continue to discriminate today against minority populations, even though their qualifications are as good as their white counterparts’. Very substantial fines have been levied if a defendant has been convicted of discriminatory practices. Everyone must be treated fairly regardless of their legal status.
There are 18 protected classes and they are as follows:
Alienage/Citizenship Status
Status as a Victim of Domestic Violence
Renting appears to be a slippery slope for many prospective tenants and landlords, however. This is due to discrimination and a lack of awareness, consideration, and knowledge about the legally protected classes in Fair Housing laws. Here is a link for tenants and landlords to gain greater knowledge of those classes: https://www.avail.co/education/guides/fair-housing-laws/fair-housingprotected-classes
In 2022, a HUD memo said the use of criminal records in screening and blanket housing denials across the board will not be considered an acceptable practice. But there are a few exceptions based on time elapsed since time served and the type of conviction. Also, based on the Fair Housing Amendment Act of 1988, if a qualified prospective tenant has a disability and reasonable accommodations and modifications are required, then denying a person a rental is against fair housing. Here is another link expanding on the law:
PHILIP A. RAICES
Real Estate Watch
Fair Housing for People with Criminal Records
There are occasions when an applicant has a voucher from social services. If the amount that is provided satisfies the rent (sometimes it must include utilities to qualify), then the tenant cannot be rejected in New York State. However, this can vary from state to state predicated on the state and local laws. In NYS if the landlord resides in one of the units, he or she can reject the voucher applicant. The government unequivocally guarantees the monthly rent while a regular tenant can never provide this guarantee. Then why would landlords feel uncomfortable with providing the necessary rentals that are so desperately needed and in high
demand over the last few years?
Discrimination and maybe sometimes fear and a non-caring attitude are the only reasons I can surmise. A contributing factor to the serious problem is the pandemic and the previous economic slowdown, losses and layoffs that have followed in some sectors of the economy. Due to the severe lack of rentals, there is a greater possibility for the situation to get worse in 2023.
More people are in need of greater assistance and are seeking out government help. Their voucher enables them to afford the rental price that is being asked. The final approval is completed when social services have to inspect the unit to make sure it qualifies, that everything functions properly, and that there are fire and smoke detectors installed. Lastly, commissions are paid to the brokers by social services, so there is no cost to the landlord.
Brokers and agents are required to take 3.5 hours of Fair Housing continuing education prior to their license renewal. I have done a few voucher rentals in the past, and the individuals and families were fine respectable people. Landlords should not be afraid to provide their rentals to those in need, as they will always receive their money electronically on a very timely basis through the state or federal government. They tend to be longer-term tenants as compared with those who use a rental as a short-term stopping-off point prior to purchasing. This gives landlords more consistent cash flow. However, here is a link to define situations that allows landlords to reject an applicant: https://www.avail.co/education/guides/
fair-housing-laws/valid-reasons-to-rejectapplicants
Fair Housing is an extremely complicated and concerning issue today and cannot be totally explained here in this short column. One must use common sense and be as pragmatic as possible in determining the qualifications of a tenant and learn as much as possible via the links that I have provided. Lastly, asking for the advice of a very knowledgeable broker or your attorney will be your best bet in keeping within the Fair Housing Laws.I want to wish all my readers a healthy, happy, and relaxing Chanukah and holiday season.
Continue to Donate to the Ukrainian Crisis and save a life or 2:
IOM’s Ukraine Response
OR The International Organization for Migration a 501(c) 3 Corporation: OR:http://donate.iom.int
Philip A. Raices is the owner/Broker of Turn Key Real Estate at 3 Grace Ave Suite 180 in Great Neck. He has 40 years of experience in the Real Estate industry and has earned designations as a Graduate of the Realtor Institute (G.R.I.) and also as a Certified International Property Specialist (C.I.P.S) as well as the new “Green Industry” Certification for eco-friendly construction and upgrades. For a “FREE” 15-minute consultation, value analysis of your home, or to answer any of your questions or concerns he can be reached by cell: (516) 6474289 or by email: Phil@TurnKeyRealEstate. Com or via https://WWW.Li-RealEstate.Com Just email or snail mail (regular mail) him with your ideas or suggestions on future columns with your name, email and cell number and he will call or email you back.
TECH
The “Internet of Things” and Smart Clothing
You’ve probably heard of the Internet of things, but thought, “what does it mean to me?” To answer that exciting question, let’s first understand the term itself:
the future is now
The Internet of things (IoT) is the interconnection, via the internet, of computing devices into everyday objects giving them the ability to send and receive data.
We already monitor our home security via smart camera devices and troubleshoot appliance repairs by connecting directly to technical support. But there are even cooler IoT applications in the works!
“Soon, the Internet of Things will meet Gucci in the form of smart clothing. For example, swimwear can include UV sensors to prevent overexposure to harmful radiation. Smart footwear may improve your running technique or monitor the mobility of patients with Parkinson’s disease. Manufacturers might embed haptic feedback into textiles to correct your posture or improve your yoga pose. And don’t forget the accessories, such as the Ray-Ban Stories smart sunglasses (that provide a window to social media when the user is otherwise offline).” - William Diggin, Accenture
Let Sandwire Technology Group show your small business that the future is NOW.
Cyber Security
44 Blank Slate Media Newspapers, Friday, December 16, 2022 IT Peace of Mind for Your Business to Thrive! 20 Hempstead Turnpike, Farmingdale, NY 11735 (516) 861-3000 • sandwire.com Serving Manhattan to Montauk Will your sensitive company data be breached today? It happens to businesses like yours every day. SECURE YOUR BUSINESS with SANDWIRE IT SOLUTIONS FOR BUSINESS SUCCESS Managed IT More than just IT support. We are your IT partner! VoIP Phones Better service. More flexibility. Lower rates.
Protect proprietary data from malicious activities of cyber thieves. Cyber Compliance HIPAA, NIST, GDPR, more. Be secure and meet requirements for your field. President and Founder Sandwire Technology Group
2.)
3.)
5.)
6.)
7.)
8.)
9.)
10.)
11.)
12.)
13.)
14.)
15.)
16.)
17.)
18.)
1.) Age
Color 4.) Ethnicity
Familial Status
Gender Identity/Expression
Handicap/Disability
Lawful Occupation
Lawful Source of Income
Marital Status
Military Status
National Origin
Partnership Status
Race
Religion/Creed
Sex
Sexual Orientation
45 Blank Slate Media Newspapers, Friday, December 16, 2022 PROFESSIONAL GUIDE ▼ HEALTH CARE MANAGEMENT ▼ LAW ▼ D’Angelo Law Associates, PC Stephanie A. D’Angelo, Esq. Your Trusts & Estates Attorney • Wills & Trusts • Estate Administration • Estate Planning • Asset Protection • Elder Law • Probate • Real Estate 901 Stewart Ave., Ste 230 • Garden City, NY 11530 www.DangeloLawAssociates.com Nassau (516) 222-1122 Queens (718) 776-7475 LAW ▼ John E. Lavelle Law Firm P.C. Accidents: • Car Accidents • Construction Site Accidents • Trip/Slip and Falls • Train/Subway Accidents • Medical Negligence Claims • Workplace Injuries Appellate Practice: • Civil Appeals - Motion and Post-Trial John Lavelle, Williston Park Resident, Parishioner, St. Aidan’s Graduate (‘93) and Proud SAS Parent 630 Willis Avenue Williston Park, NY 11596 516-325-1175 John.Lavelle@LavelleInjuryFirm.com www.JohnLavelleLaw.com Proudly serving clients in New York & Pennsylvania TUTOR ▼ MATH ALL MATH Grade 4 - First Year College, ACT, SAT, AP, GRE, ALL Placement Tests VERY EXPERIENCED, specializing in all Private and Public schools (Chaminade, Kellenberg, Sacred Heart, etc.) teachers at very reasonable rates. “homework help” “test prep help” Richard 516-567-1512 educationtimeincrgs@outlook.com TUTORING ▼ Port Tutoring Academic Success *ACT *SATI *SATII *AP *SSAT *CHSEE *ISEE *HSPT TEST PREP All Subjects/ All Grades/ All Levels Including: *Earth Science * Honors Biology * AP Physics *AP History *ELA/Writing *Common Core Math *Honors Chemistry *Statistics *Spanish *French *Note-Taking Individual & Small Group Instruction 516.767.1342 933 Port Washington Blvd., Port Washington, NY 11050 info@porttutoring.com PLACE YOUR AD ▼ Advertising on this page is only open to N.Y.S. licensed professionals. Call 516-307-1045 and let us begin listing you in our Professional Guide and Professional Services pages. SUBMIT YOUR PRESS RELEASES AND NEWS ITEMS ONLINE AT THEISLAND360.COM/ SUBMIT-NEWS
46 Blank Slate Media Newspapers, Friday, December 16, 2022 BUYER’S GUIDE ▼ CARPENTRY and 516-884-4016 Lic# H0454870000 Crown Molding Window Molding Base Molding Picture Frame Molding New Doors Old Plaster Removed New Drywall Installed Rotted Wood Replaced DEMOLITION AND JUNK REMOVAL $$ Top Cash Paid $$ HIGH END ANTIQUES HIGH CASH PAiD Damaged Quality Pieces also wanted Oil Paintings,Mid-Century Accessories 1950s/60s, Porcelain,Costume Jewelry,Sterling Silver,Gold, Furniture,Objects of Art,etc. • 1Pc.or entire estates • CALL JOSEPHOR R UTH 718-598-3045 or 516-270-2128 AntiqueAssets.com Buying and Selling over 40 Years / Member New England Appraisers Association Family Business for over 40 years Premium prices paid for Tiffany, Meissen Porcelain,Bronzes, Marble,etc. ANTIQUES NOJOB TOO BIG ORSMALL “Old Fashioned Craftsmanship” Lic#H3700460000 Specializing in Bathroom Repairs & Leaks *Shower Leak Experts* *Plumbing Repairs &Tile Repairs* *Grouting * Sheetrock* Painting *Plastering *New Custom Bathrooms* EXPERT BATHROOM REPAIRS BATHROOMS AND KITCHENS •Screen Fix •Computer Repairs •Onsite Service •Tutoring •VHS to DVD 516.472.0500 www.ComputerRepairForce.com 33 Great Neck Rd. Ste.#5 2nd Floor,Great Neck Open 7 Days • Patient & Friendly COMPUTER REPAIRCUSTOM FRAMING JACK’S CUSTOM FRAMING We can frame anything! 516-775-9495 Over 30 Years in Business Quality Care & Workmanship Thousands of frames to choose from 92 Covert Ave., Stewart Manor HOURS: Tuesday - Saturday 10-5 @jacks_custom_framing jackmccullough@me.com HOME IMPROVEMENT E Elleeggaannt t T Toouucch h R Reemmooddeelliinng g “Quality Construction with a Personal Touch” Deal direct with owner - Serving li over 25 years All Types of Home Improvements 631.281.7033 Licence #H18H2680000 • F r e e E s t i m a t e s • e x t e n s i o o n s • d o r m e r s • d e c k s • F r e e d e s i g n s e r v i c e • K i t c h e n s • b a t h r o o m s • s i d i n g CONCRETE COATINGS 15-YEAR RESIDENTIAL WARRANTY POLYUREA NOT EPOXY 4X STRONGER THAN EPOXY NO HOT TIRE PICK-UP! WON’T CHIP OR PEEL EASY TO CLEAN INDOOR/OUTDOOR ONE DAY FLOORS 516.676.8469 iPaintFloors.com GARAGE FLOORS LAUNDRY ROOMS PATIOS WALKWAYS RECREATION ROOMS BASEMENTS SERVICE AREAS OFFICES SCHOOLS SHOWROOMS RESTROOMS PRODUCTION AREAS VETERINARY CLINICS HOME IMPROVEMENT HOME IMPROVEMENT • New Construction & Conversions • Dormers • Extensions • Mason Work • Stone • Kitchens • Windows • Siding • Decks • Porticos • Baths • Basements • Carpentry Work Nass#HO444640000 • Suff#HI-61446 • Insured ISA HOME IMPROVEMENT ISA HOME IMPROVEMENT Free Estimates / 516-581-9146 N.Y.D.O.T.#10405 MOVING & STORAGE INC. Long Island and New York State Specialists •Residential • Commercial •Piano & Organ Experts •Boxes Available FREE ESTIMATES www.ajmoving.com 516-741-2657 114 Jericho Tpke. Mineola, NY11501 MOVING LAMPS FIXED $65 In Home Service Handy Howard 646-996-7628 HOME IMPROVEMENT CHIMNEY SPECIALISTS PLACE YOUR AD ADVERTISE WITH US! To place your adå call 516.307.1045
47 Blank Slate Media Newspapers, Friday, December 16, 2022 BUYER’S GUIDE ▼ www.1866WEJUNKIT.com 516-541-1557 ALL PHASES OF RUBBISH REMOVAL & DEMOLITION • Residential • Commercial Construction Sites Kitchens • Bathrooms Clean-Ups • Attics Basements • Flood/Fire Bob Cat Service JUNK REMOVAL PAINTING, POWERWASHING • INTERIOR / EXTERIOR • B. Moore Paints • Power Washing • Dustless Sanding Vacuum System • Taping • Spackling • Plaster Removed • New Drywall and 516-884-4016 Lic# H0454870000 #1 PAINTER IN YOUR NEIGHBORHOOD FREE ESTIMATES CALL: 718-709-7000 FAMILY OWNED AND OPERATED SINCE 1985 Highly Professional & Trained Painters Locally Owned & Operated Fully Licensed & Insured For Your Peace Of Mind We Use Only The Highest Industry Standard Preparation & Materials Exterior Painting Interior Painting Wallpaper Removal & Installation Powerwashing Carpentry 10% OFF ANY INTERIOR OR EXTERIOR PAINTING JOB WHY CHOOSE US? www.silvaspainting.com PAINTING PAINTING Interior and Exterior • Plaster/Spackle Light Carpentry • Decorative Moldings Power Washing www.MpaintingCo.com PAINTING & WALLPAPER est. 1978 516-385-3132 New Hyde Park 516-328-7499 Licensed & Insured ROOFING FAMILY OWNED & OPERATED MASONRY • PAVING • CONCRETE FREE ESTIMATES LOU: 516 850-4886 LIC: #H2219010000 FULLY INSURED Contracting LLC DRIVEWAYS & PARKING LOTS RETAINING WALLS FOUNDATIONS DRYWELL WATER DRAINAGE WATER PROOFING SIDEWALKS PATIOS / PAVERS BRICK / BLOCK BLUE STONE STEPS / STOOPS BELGIUM BLOCK CULTURED STONE MASONRY UPDATE YOUR HOME INSULATION FOR FREE AND SAVE MONEY ON YOUR ENERGY COSTS FOAM INSULATION SOLUTION Certified Partner of National Grid Ask about the Total Home Care Program Rebates 917-870-7373 CALL TODAY FOR FREE ESTIMATE INSULATION PLACE YOUR AD ADVERTISE WITH US! To place your ad call 516.307.1045 ADVERTISE WITH US PLACE YOUR AD WITH US! To place your ad, call 516.307.1045 or fax 516.307.1046
Oligarch’s cousin donates to Santos
Continued from Page 9
The congressman-elect was also scheduled to attend the New York Young Republican Club’s annual black-tie gala event Dec. 11, along with Donald Trump Jr., U.S. Rep. Marjorie Taylor Greene and former gubernatorial candidate Andrew Giuliani along with a number of far-right individuals.
Devolder-Santos has been criticized by Democratic officials for his ties to far-right politicians such as Greene. Greene was criticized for saying at the Young Republicans dinner that the Jan. 6 insurrection at the Capitol building would have featured “armed” rioters if she and Steve Bannon, the chief strategist under former President Donald Trump, had organized it.
“If Steve Bannon and I had organized that, we would have won,” Greene said during the event. “Not to mention, it would have been armed. Yeah. See, that’s the whole joke isn’t it?”
Greene, in a subsequent statement, said her comments were sarcastic and denied having any involvement in the insurrection.
“My comments were making fun of Joe Biden and the Democrats, who have continuously made me a political target since Jan. 6th,” she said in a statement.
The White House described the congresswoman’s comments as “violent rhetoric” and a “slap in the face” to those who defended the Capitol against rioters and, in several cases, lost their lives doing so.
Santos, a Trump supporter, urged officials to intervene in the counting of Electoral College votes following the insurrection. He is also quoted as saying he was “at the Ellipse on Jan. 6,” the day of rioting at the U.S. Capitol, and is quoted on video saying he “wrote a nice check for a law firm” to aid the rioters who stormed the building.
48 Blank Slate Media Newspapers, Friday, December 16, 2022 • Fall Drain Outs • Backflow Device Tests • Free Estimates • Installation • Service/Repairs Joe Barbato (516) 775-1199 LAWN SPRINKLERS BUYER’S GUIDE ▼ *CUSTOM WINDOW TREATMENTS TOP BRANDS AT DISCOUNT PRICES* WE BRING THE SHOWROOM TO YOU FREE CONSULTATION 516-426-2890 WWW.MADEINTHESHADENSLI.COM FAMILY OWNED & OPERATED WINDOW TREATMENTS SECURITY SPECIALIST FREE ESTIMATES • BURGLAR ALARMS • FIRE ALARMS • CARBON MONOXIDE • LOW TEMP DETECTORS • WATER DETECTORS • GAS DETECTORS 516-486-5484 LIC #: 12000014219 *CELLULAR RADIOS NEW & 3G UPGRADES SERVING GARDEN CITY FOR 40 YEARS CHECK US OUT ON FACEBOOK AT FACEBOOK.COM/ THEISLAND360 AND TWITTER: @THEISLAND360
Homecoming for Hadassah’s leader
G.N.’s Rhoda Smolow became president of largest American Jewish women’s group in 2020
BY ROBERT PELAEZ
As a young teacher in Great Neck more than 40 years ago, Rhoda Smolow said she never thought of being a leader in the Jewish community while her grandmother envisioned it diferently.
Smolow, who moved to the peninsula in 1978, was a reading teacher in Glen Head involved in the Great Neck community. She recalls her grandmother being a member of Hadassah, the Women’s Zionist Organization of America, which brings women together to promote change in a variety of prominent issues facing the global Jewish community.
Following a chapter event in New York City, which her grandmother’s group attended, Smolow, a ffth-generation Hadassah member, fell victim to something millions can relate to — being embarrassed by a grandparent.
“My grandmother turned to all of her friends and said, ‘My granddaughter will be the national president of Hadassah’,” Smolow told Blank Slate Media. “To this day, I think she had a foreshadowing or something that saw what I didn’t see. And I hope she’s still watching.”
More than 40 years after her grandmother’s prediction, Smolow
became the 27th president of what is now the nation’s largest Jewish women’s organization in America in
early 2020. While being president was not an aspiration when she was frst starting out in one of Hadassah’s
this position.
“I really, truly am a people person,” Smolow said. “I love working with people, I love mentoring people and I am a diplomat. So often I’ve been called in to be someone who can help fnd solutions to issues or challenges. There are no problems, there are only challenges that have solutions.”
Smolow did have presidential experience within the organization on the chapter level for Great Neck and on the regional level. She also held a handful of other committee and leadership positions before her national presidency.
Hadassah, founded in 1912, utilizes the two hospitals of their medical organization in Jerusalem, Hadassah Hospital Ein Kerem and Hadassah Hospital Mount Scoups, to aid more than 1 million people every year and with cutting-edge and highly touted medical research. The 300,000-member organization also helps combat antisemitism and ensure Israel’s security.
When the coronavirus pandemic struck just weeks after Smolow was sworn in as president, the organization and its newly appointed leader were faced with an unprecedented
G.N. native, comedian returning to roots
BY ROBERT PELAEZ
Great Neck native and comedian Talia Reese is coming back to her roots for New Year’s Eve, hosting a comedy night and soiree at Colbeh, a Kosher Mediterranean restaurant in her hometown.
Reese, who has been featured on Comedy Central, Sirius XM and more, cut her chops as a comedy troupe director before making a move into bankruptcy law. Her passion for comedy, she said, made her presence a bit more felt than others on her legal team.
“I defnitely had the most personality in my department in bankruptcy law,” Reese told Blank Slate Media. “It’s a very antisocial feld, everyone just likes being in their offce.”
Being a strong writer and researcher made the transition from comedy to law easier than one might assume, she said. While some skills seamlessly translated from the world of comedy to the world of law, she said, the tedium of her daily routine and long road to being a trial lawyer or partner nudged her back into comedy.
The transition from sketch comedy to stand-up performances, Reese said, was difcult in some ways, mainly because there isn’t anyone or anything else to work
with. At the same time, doing standup shows and routines for almost the past 10 years makes her dread sharing a stage at the same time as someone else.
“Being alone on stage and having to pull in all the laughter without a scene partner, doing crowd work and doing a little improv were skills I really had to hone in on,”
she said. “Now, I can’t even imagine having someone else. I’d be like, ‘Get of my stage, what are you doing?’ It’s crazy.”
Nearly a decade later after her switch, Reese said, her decision to pursue comedy was a wise one, getting steady work on Long Island, especially due to her knowledge of the area. Being an Orthodox Jew, she said, also gives her more niche material that she’s able to expound upon in certain areas.
“I have my regular club material and then I have more niche events where I can talk about Jewish rituals and traditions and I’m able to poke fun at the religion or being married to a really observant man,” Reese said.
Being a native of Great Neck, she said, it’s a great feeling to know a lot about a certain area when performing because the jokes can be relatable to much of the audience. The politics of local elections and heated school board debates surrounding curriculum are some of the aspects Reese said she loves to tailor sets around for the Great Neck audiences.
Reese expressed her enjoyment at providing an outlet for the divisiveness of Great Neck to be relieved with some comedy so people can stop fghting, take a beat and laugh for a change.
“Instead of people fghting all the time, I want people to come together and laugh,” she said. “I think in this community, we really have more in common than we don’t and that’s what’s so great about comedy.”
Poking fun at both extremes of a certain topic or heated debate, she said, is key to having the entire audience engaged and laughing at what’s going on. Not pitting one group of people against another and acknowledging the ridiculousness of both sides, Reese said, leads to everybody enjoying the set.
The event begins at 8:30 p.m., with all-inclusive admission costing $126 per person. Reese said she has worked with Colbeh before and attendees can expect a stocked open bar with premium spirits to go along with a night full of laughter and dancing.
Reese emphasized that the show is not just for Great Neck residents and hoped others throughout the North Shore and Long Island would spend the holiday with her at Colbeh, located at 75 N. Station Plaza. Other comedians featured at the event include Erik Bransteen, Eli Lebowicz and Eman Morgan. To register or to fnd more information on the event, visit: taliareese.com.
49 The Port Washington Times, Friday, December 16, 2022 PW
Great Neck groups, Smolow said her continuous involvement and passion for working with people led her to
COURTESY OF TALIA REESE
Great Neck native and comedian Talia Reese will be hosting a New Year’s Eve comedy night and soiree at Cobleh on Dec. 31.
PHOTO COURTESY OF HADASSAH
Continued on Page 51
Hadassah National President Rhoda Smolow addresses Hadassah’s 100th National Convention in Jerusalem.
West Shore review lacking: Planning board
Continued from Page 1
story, 176-unit residential development with a 29-slip public marina at 145 West Shore Road.
“The DEIS did not adequately demonstrate how the proposed action is consistent with or advances the goals of A Shared Vision for Port Washington Peninsula,” the board wrote. “Provide more detailed explanations of how the project addresses each of the fve community goals as follows: walkable community, greener community, connected to the waterfront, defned by geography not municipal boundaries [and] maintain quality of life.”
The planning board also said that the developers, Southern Land Company, had not
adequately revised the environmental statement to refect a signifcant change afecting the project in relinquishing its prior claim to Tax Lot 6-53-1005.B.
“As a result, the project sponsor can no longer pursue the claim that its acreage of mostly underwater land may be transferred to the upland parcel as of right and can only be pursued by a variance,” they wrote. “As this was apparently discovered just prior to submission of the DEIS, the majority of the document still refers to Lot 1005.B as being in private ownership.”
Southern Land now has to complete a Final Environmental Impact Statement. If the Town Board accepts it as complete, they will
Mineola OKs zoning changes to aid biz
from Page 6
“This does not mean there is going to be a hotel on every corner or three and four-story buildings up and down Jericho, quite the contrary,” Pereira said. “If we are presented with something that doesn’t ft with the view of the board or the character of the neighborhood, we can always say no.”
For additional residential units to be developed, current regulations outside the districts require parking spaces to be put in place. With the new districts, the board can require future developers to pay toward a
parking trust fund that the village can use in the future to buy land and create more parking.
Pereira also added that he hopes to see owners that are not taking care of their properties use the new possibilities to start doing so or welcome new ones to fx the vacant storefronts.
“I’m passionate about this, I’m passionate about our village and I’m passionate about taking it forward,” Pereira said. “I think this gives us the tools to try and fx this.”
set a public hearing date for their rezoning application. Eforts to reach the developers for a comment on their expected timeline were unavailing.
Then-Supervisor Jon Kaiman and Councilman Fred Pollack announced in 2005 that the Town Board had approved two actions to incorporate the Port Washington Shared Vision Plan into the Town’s planning process.
The frst measure made the vision plan a Town planning document. This meant that all departments would use the community’s goals when deciding to afect the Port Washington Peninsula.
Developers must also show whether any
new proposed project conforms to or deviates from the vision plan when applying for site plan review.
Critics argue that allowing the project to proceed will alter Port Washington. Alongside signs being distributed and planted, an online petition against the project has also received over 6,000 signatures.
The petition says that the Port Washington Peninsula cannot support “more overdevelopment.” It adds that the proposed zoning change may set a precedent resulting in nearby buildings of equal scale.
Joe Rossi, Southern Land’s Northeast director of acquisitions, said that the developers wish to restore the beachfront for public use. He said the proposed project will have little impact on the school district and trafc patterns, while also having many environmental and economic benefts.
50 The Port Washington Times, Friday, December 16, 2022 PW
Continued
PHOTO COURTESY OF SOUTHERN LAND COMPANY
The potential appearance of 145 West Shore Road in Port Washington. The developer’s Draft Environmental Impact Statement has been reviewed by the North Hempstead Planning Department.
PHOTO BY BRANDON DUFFY
Mineola Mayor Paul Pereira gives his board report during the Dec. 7 meeting.
Homecoming for Hadassah’s G.N. leader
health challenge. Despite the hardships brought into the world due to the virus, Smolow said, she viewed it as another challenger that must have a solution.
“I can’t explain why, it’s just something inside of me, but I looked at this challenge and every challenge as something that can be overcome,” she said. “It was also about how we could help the country and all of our women maintain
what they were doing for Hadassah, including fund-raising and maintaining relationships with each other, Jewish education and advocacy.”
Smolow said the organization helped its members learn how to adapt to Zoom and allow for presentations and speakers to be consistently featured to provide updates with the hospitals. She lauded the staf who made everything remotely accessible but did not downplay the work and challenges the entire organization
normally encounters.
Advocating for hospital funding, speaking with high-ranking government ofcials and providing relief eforts for communities facing natural disasters are some of the other roles Hadassah carries out on a consistent basis.
Smolow said she wanted to have Hadassah’s 100th National Convention in Israel during her installation speech in Orlando before the pandemic struck. Despite the global spread of
the virus halting almost every gathering for the foreseeable future months after her installation, Smolow said she still predicted that Hadassah would have its centennial convention in Israel in 2022.
“People thought I was crazy,” she said. “And there were a lot of naysayers. There were a lot of people around us and all over the world that were scared and no one knew when it would end.”
G.N. pocket track extension complete
Continued from Page 4
upwards of 12 train cars could be stored. The existing track area, ofcials said, was able to house 12 cars.
The pocket track extension, ofcials said, will beneft the Port Washington branch for extra service to Mets-Willets Point and allow for a more reliable service for the railroad’s East Side Acess into Grand Central Station, the topic of much discussion in recent months.
“This infrastructure improvement enables the LIRR to run more trains more reliably on the Port Washington Branch,” Long Island Railroad Interim President Catherine Rinaldi said in a statement. “Completion of this work brings us one step closer to the launch of LIRR’s historic new service to Grand Central Madison, the largest service expansion in LIRR history.”
After proposing changes to the Port Washington branch that would have eliminated express service as part of the East Side Access project, transit ofcials abandoned their plans to do so in late September.
The draft timetable changes, residents and ofcials said, would shortchange commuters throughout Port Washington, Plandome, Manhasset and Great Neck by decreasing express service. The Metropolitan Transportation Authority held multiple virtual sessions to hear feedback from North Shore residents and of-
fcials, a majority of which was in opposition to the proposed cutbacks.
Overall, the branch will receive an 11% boost in service, with more trains becoming available for commuters on the Port Washington Branch, according to the draft schedules following the agency’s announcement.
A total of 103 trains per day will be servicing the branch, 10 more than the current schedule has, ofcials said. On weekends, a total of fve more trains, 81 total, will be operating along the branch.
The draft morning rush hour schedule includes 15 trains arriving in Manhattan between 6:16 a.m. and 9:51 a.m., a 36% increase from the current 11 that arrive at Penn Station between 6:21 a.m. and 9:34 a.m., according to ofcials.
The branch’s afternoon and evening rush hour schedule will also see a 43% increase in service, including three express trains. A total of 20 trains will leave Manhattan between 4:06 p.m. and 7:43 p.m., six more than the 14 trains that currently provided that service to commuters on the Port Washington branch, according to ofcials.
Rinaldi said she was pleased to hear the concerns from North Shore commuters, but said more work will need to be done to help the overall expansion of the Long Island Rail
Road.
“The true key to the addition of future service increases is expanding track capacity at Port Washington Yard,” Rinaldi said in a statement. “The Town of North Hempstead has committed to working with Senator Kaplan and Assemblymember Sillitti to advance this long sought-after project that is the bottleneck to having more service on the branch.”
While the pocket track expansion aids in the MTA’s quest to advance the Long Island Railroad and provide quality service to its riders, Larry Penner- a former regional director for the Federal Transit Administration, said most all of the pocket track expansion was completed several years ago.
The lack of a 3rd track, Penner said, prohibited the Long Island Railroad from taking advantage of the pocket track extension.
“Since 2018, Port Washington branch riders could only look out the window and wonder why there was no live third rail to go with the new pocket track,” Penner said in a letter to Blank Slate Media. “If the third rail was installed and live, commuters could have reaped the benefts Rinaldi talked about as a result of this investment four years earlier.”
Eforts to reach MTA ofcials for further comment were unavailing.
Manhasset awaits guidance on mascot
change to the mascot without informing the rest of the public.
“Rumors of a new image circulate throughout the school, but also clear changes have been made around the building,” the email said. “We urge the school board and administration to immediately stop proceeding with the backdoor termination of our Indian image and rather speak with the proud Manhasset community before any changes are made.”
The group of students claimed that the Manhasset students metaphorically wore the “Indian” name
with pride and passion.
“Manhasset students represent this culture with the utmost respect,” the letter said. “Not once at any school or community event have we witnessed the Indian name be tarnished or demeaned in any way, rather, we watch as students and community members proudly boast the name, chanting ‘We are the Indians’ for anyone in the nearby vicinity to hear.”
In a statement responding to the student’s letter, the Manhasset Justice Initiative, an online organization comprised of current and former Manhasset school students,
claimed there was a disconnect on how to appropriately honor native tribes and communities to the area.
“By claiming “We are the Indians,” we are claiming that we have the shared experience of the hardship the native communities faced and paying homage to a caricature that doesn’t accurately represent them,” the initiative said in a statement last year. “When the Native Americans said “do not forget us,” it wasn’t to keep the mascot but make sure that their cultures are depicted accurately and respectfully with educational components
accompanying any decision the school makes.”
The memo from the state’s education department came on the heels of a court case involving Cambridge Central School District, which voted to retire its “Indians” team name, logo and mascot in June 2021 before reversing its decision a month later after new board of education members took ofce.
Albany County’s Supreme Court ruled that public schools violate the Dignity Act when using Native American mascots.
Ex-Port North trustee’s wife replaces him
ment checks several boxes, including honoring Sherman while bringing in someone familiar with the village.
“She knows peripherally a lot more than most people. There was also a set a sense of Mill Pond Acres, that they were uniformly thrilled with her representing them,” he said.
“And I mean, she’s just a natural. Frankly, the only question was if she was going to accept?”
He emphasized the importance of having a representative from Mill Pond Acres condos on the board.
“We’re thrilled to continue to have representation of Mill Pond Acres on our board, which is extremely important and something
that has to be,” said Weitzner. “It’s not mandated. We don’t have council districts, but balance is important. It’s fair to represent the village as a whole.”
Schef said she intends to run for re-election this spring after fulflling the rest of her husband’s term.
With foreshadowing reminiscent of her grandmother’s, Smolow still pushed forward with plans to hold the convention in Israel in 2022 as vaccines became more widespread and gatherings slowly began to ramp up. Last month, Smolow’s plan was fulflled as more than 400 attendees met in person for the frst time since 2019.
The convention in Jerusalem, titled “Together In Israel: Our Pride. Our Purpose. Hadassah’s 100th National Convention,” included speeches from Israel President Isaac Herzon, U.S. Ambassador to Israel Thomas R. Nides, Israel Ministry of Health Director-General Nachman Ash and more.
Ofcials lauded Smolow and the organization for being a beacon in Israel’s health-care system and providing care to any individual who needs it, regardless of race, religion, ethnicity or creed.
“Health care in Israel wouldn’t be what it is without Hadassah,” Ash said.
The convention also featured a moving reunion of a Ukrainian native who escaped the country during the war against Russia and his mother. Other speakers and testimonies from hospital patients and medical students highlighted the positive impact Hadassah has had.
The organization also handed out a pair of awards during the convention, including one given to a past president, Marlene Edith Post, the frst woman president of Temple Judea in Manhasset. Post received the Henrietta Szold Award, the organization’s highest honor named after its founder.
“My personal family and my Hadassah family are the two pillars on which my life stands,” Post said.
The organization also handed out its inaugural Power of Esther Award, named after the Jewish heroine Queen Esther. It is given to an individual who utilizes the determination and intelligence to speak out on behalf of the Jewish community. The award was presented to Michal Herzog, the frst lady of Israel.
When asked what advice Smolow would give to her younger self just starting out in the Hadassah world, she said to not say “no” and to not worry about the level of involvement or commitment joining an organization like Hadassah would entail.
“When you fnd out what it’s all about, you’ll fnd the way you can be involved,” she said. “It doesn’t have to be the way your mother or grandmother did it, but there is a way for you to feel empowered and a part of something bigger than yourself.”
A mother of three children, now full-grown adults, Smolow said Hadassah allowed her to do so much more for her kids, her community, her synagogue and the greater good than she ever thought possible.
51 The Port Washington Times, Friday, December 16, 2022 PW
Continued
from Page 12
Continued from Page 49 FOR THE LATEST IN COMMUNITY NEWS VISIT US 24 HOURS A DAY 7 DAYS A WEEK AT WWW. THEISLAND360.COM
Continued from Page 6
We’re
Open: Mon–Thurs: 9am-5:30pm Fri: 9am-6pm
Name
Buyers’s
Any
• Great Neck News • Williston Times • New Hyde Park Herald Courier • Manhasset Times • Roslyn Times • Port Washington Times • Garden City News • Bethpage Newsgram • Jericho Syosset News Journal • Mid Island Times • Syosset Advance To Place Your Ad Call
CAREER TRAINING
ANNOUNCEMENTS
FLORIDA SATSUMA MANDARINS Tree ripe harvested Easy to peel Perfect for kids and Christmas gifts. Go to website: www.barlcitrus.com to place your order. Shipped daily 15 lb. box $45w/free shipping
A.T. STEWART EXCHANGE CONSIGNMENT SHOP 516-746-8900
Antiques-
INVITED ESTATE SALES BY TRACY
and ONLINE AUCTIONS now! Sell the contents of an entire house or sell just a few things! You can host your own sale on invitedsales.com and Facebook and Instagram or we can do it for you. We can photograph, advertise and handle the winning pickups for you within a week! can get your house ready on time! We are a one stop service for all your needs when you are moving or selling a property! Selling, donating, discarding and cleaning out services can be done to meet your time frame with minimal stress. Contact info@invitedsales.com for more information or call 516-279-6378 to schedule a consultation or receive more information. Visit us at www.invitedsales.com for a listing of our upcoming Virtual Tag Sales and Weekly Auctions
LENOX HOLIDAY CHINA 5 Piece Service for 12$1,050 Additional accessory pieces and glassware sold separate.
Service for 12+ with additional accessory pieces by Grace China, 83 pieces$550. Call 917-414-0967
AUCTIONS
Cool Old Stuff in Glen Cove Vintage Shop. WINNER OF BEST OF NASSAU COUNTY 2021. GREAT PRICED items for Boat and Home. See ALL online: Wilsonsdrydock.com. For info/ appt Please call 516-662-2821
WANTED TO BUY
Dishes,
Blank Slate Media Newspapers, Friday, December 16, 2022
HELP WANTED ADMINISTRATIVE OPENING Fallsburg Central School Assistant Director of Pupil Personnel Services NYS SDA or SDL Certification Required. Please for-cated at fallsburgcd.net) by Dec 23rd to: Fallsburg-recruitment@scboces.org Attn: Assistant Director Search EOE HIRING MAIL SORTERS $16.00-$17.00, Pickers/Packers Springfield Gardens $17.00 Mystery Shoppers Ages 21-25 $20.00 860 Long Island Ave, Deer Park, NY 631-586-4699
EMPLOYMENT
COMPUTER & IT TRAINING PROGRAM! Train ONLINE to get the skills to become a Computer & Help Desk Professional now! Grants and Scholarships available for certain programs for qualified applicants. Call CTI for details Computer with internet is required. TRAIN ONLINE TO DO MEDICAL BILLING Become a Medical Office Professional online at CTI! Get trained, certified & ready to work in months! Call Computer with internet is required.
CAREER TRAINING Get DIRECTV FOR $64.99/month for 12 months with CHOICE Package. Save an additional $120 over 1st year. First 3 months of HBO Max, Cinemax, Showtime, Starz and Epix included! Directv is & Assoc.). Some restrictions apply. Call 1-888-534-6918
MARKETPLACE
Come to Consign & Stay to Shop Visit....Our Shop 109
St. Saturday
Shop Our Online Store ATStewartExchange.org
MARKETPLACE
Artwork
Eleventh
12-4
Items to Conto: store@atstewartexchange.org All proceeds benefit The Garden City Historical Society Like us on Facebook & Instagram
Photos, Coins,
Toys,
LOOKING TO BUY! Estates, Oriental
Flatware, Watches, Clothing, Old
Stamps, Records,
Action Figures, Comics, Art and Furniture. Immediate Cash Paid Call George 917-775-3048 or 718-386-1104
nassau COMMUNITY CLASSIFIEDS To advertise here call:516.307.1045 EMPLOYMENT, ANNOUNCEMENTS, SITUATION WANTED, MARKETPLACE Deadlines
Classified Advertising Tuesday Noon Legal
TOP CASH PAID: ESTATE CON-ELRY, ETC. Please call 718-598-3045 or 516-270-2128 www.antiqueassets.com
Monday 2:00pm:
Notices/
Changes Friday 5:00pm
Guide Error Responsibility All ads placed by telephone are read back for verification of copy context. In the event of an error of Blank Slate Media LLC we are not responsible for the first incorrect insertion. We assume no responsiblity for an error in and beyond the cost of the ad.
Cancellation Policy Ads must be cancelled the Monday before the first Thursday publication. All cancellations must be received in writing by fax at: 516.307.1046
verbal cancellations must be approved by a supervisor. There are no refunds on cancelled advertising. An advertising credit only will be issued.
www.theIsland360.com VISIT US ONLINE TODAY! NASSAU COUNTY NEEDS CERTIFIED HHA’S, COMPANIONS AND HOMEMAKERS. ★★★ HIRING IMMEDIATELY★★★ • Competitive Pay Rate • Flexible Scheduling • All Shifts & Locations Available “A Special thank you to all the Nurse Aides and all who Save Lives.” 718-850-3400 SCHOOL BUS/VAN DRIVERS Best Pay Package in the Industry! Start at $26.68* (Bus) • $23.27* (Van) Equal Opportunity Employer FREE CDL TRAINING •25 Hrs. Week Minimum FULL BENEFIT PACKAGE HUNTINGTON COACH 631-271-8931 *Attendance Bonus Included BlankSlate MEDIA www.theisland360.com Roslyn Times Williston Times Port WashingtonTimes Herald Courier Great Neck News Manhasset Times 22 PLANTING FIELD ROAD ROSLYN HEIGHTS, NEW YORK 11577 BlankSlate MEDIA www.theisland360.com Roslyn Times Williston Times Port WashingtonTimes Herald Courier Great Neck News Manhasset Times 22 PLANTING FIELD ROAD ROSLYN HEIGHTS, NEW YORK 11577 We are seeking a tax clerk/processor/breakdown person for a full time, (Saturdays are a MUST) seasonal (February-April) position to join our tax team. You will perform clerical and administrative functions in order to drive company success. You must be able to work overtime. • • C Coolllaat t i inng g a annd d p p r roocceessssin n g c coommpplleet t e ed d t taax x r reet t u urrn n s • F Fil l inngg, C Cooppy y inng g a annd d F Faax x inng g • • C Coooorrddiin n a at t n n g g i n nccoommiinng g & o ouut t g go o n ng g m maai i e ed d i n n r reettuurrn n s s • • H Haannd d l n ng g i in n c coomminng g & o ouut t g go o n ng g m ma a l a annd d fa ax x e es s • • L Liiggh h t p ph h o onne e du ut t y y • P Prreevviioou u s s e ex x p peerriieen n c ce e in n o of f f c ce e a addmmiin n • • A Abbi i it t y y t to o p pr r o orri t ti i z ze e & m muult t i ittaas s k • • S Sttrroon n g g A At t t teennt t o on n to o de ettaail • • S Sttrroon n g O r rggaan n z zaat t i ioonnaal sk l lls s • F Fu u l ll- t timme e T Teemmppoorraarry y ( (s s e eaas s o onnaal l ) Salary:$18.00/hour Email:LJR@rosovichassociates.com Call 718-347-9631 Certified HHA •Experienced •Excellent references. Wewill provide you the best caregivers in America. Filipino men and women. Kind,loving and caring at this very difficult time. Call Gertrude 347–444–0960 Savings shown over aggregated single item base price. Photos exemplary of product advertised. Limit 2. 8 free 6 oz. burgers will be sent to each shipping address that includes 71941. Standard S&H added per address. Butcher’s Deluxe Package 5 oz.) 5 oz.) (6 oz.) (3 8 oz.) 4 oz.) (3 1 oz.) 8 F R E E FREE PureGround 6 oz.) 71941GL Z separately $225 94 SPECIAL INTRODUCTORY PRICE $9999 8 BURGERS FREE ORDER NOW! 1.877.461.6823 OmahaSteaks.com/GiftGiving3556
Phone: 516.307.1045 x 218 e-mail: dflynn@theisland360.com In Person: 22 Planting Field Road Roslyn Heights, NY 11577
53 Blank Slate Media Newspapers, Friday, December 16, 2022 TAG SALE MOVING SALE GARDEN CITY Everything must go! Furniture, Designer Clothing, Sports Equipment, Christmas Gifts! Much More!! Monday, Tues, Wednesday 12/19, 12/20, 12/21 10 a.m. 215 New Hyde Park Rd, Garden City, NY 11530 APPOINTMENTS PREFERRED 516-398-0407 AUTOMOTIVE AUTOS WANTED DONATE YOUR CAR TO BREAST CANCER RECOVERY! Tax Deduction Receipt Given Upon Pick-Up, Free Towing. 501C Charity. 631-988-9043 breastcancerresearchrecovery.org AUTOMOTIVE AUTOS WANTED DRIVE OUT BREAST CANCER: Donate a car today! The benefits of donating your car or boat: Fast Free Pickup 24hr response Tax deductionEasy to do! Call 24/7: 855-905-4755 WHEELS FOR WISHES benefitting Make-A-Wish Northeast New York. Your Car Donations Matter NOW More Than Ever! Free Vehicle Pick Up ANYWHERE. We Accept Most Vehicles Running or Not. 100% Tax Deductible. Minimal To No Human Contact. Call: 877-798-9474 Car Donation Foundation d/b/a Wheels For Wishes. www.wheelsforwishes.org REAL ESTATE FOR RENT APARTMENT FOR RENT GARDEN CITY BORDER APARTMENTS Huge, bright 2BR, 2 bath apt. $2,485 + electric. Gated parking. Laundry room, air conditioning, hardwood floors, Near LIRR. Avail 1/15/23. NO BROKER FEE www.gardencityborder.com Voice or text: 516-524-6965 SERVICE DIRECTORY SERVICES ARE YOU BEHIND 10K OR MORE on your taxes? Stop wage and bank levies, liens and audits, unfiled tax returns, payroll issues, and resolve tax debt FAST. Call 888-869-5361 (Hours: Mon-Fri 7am5pm PST) can frame anything! Quality Care & Workmanship Thousands of frames to choose from!! Over 30 years in business! 92 Covert Ave, Stewart Manor 516-775-9495 HOME IMPROVEMENTS AQUATEC LAWN SPRINKLERS FALL DRAIN OUTS Backflow Device Tests Free Estimates Installation Service/ Repairs Joe Barbato 516-775-1199 BATH & SHOWER UPDATES in as little as ONE DAY! Affordable pricesNo payments for 18 months! Lifetime warranty & professional installs. Senior & Military Discounts available. Call: 866-393-3636 CHIMNEY KING ENT. INC. FREE ESTIMATES Stainless steel liners cleaning & repair specialists. Masonry specialist. FULLY licensed & insured. NYC NASSAU SUFFOLK 516-766-1666 or 631-225-2600 Since 1982 chimneykinginc.com REPAIR AGAIN! American Residential Warranty covers ALL MAJOR SYSTEMS AND APPLIANCES. 30 DAY RISK FREE/$100 OFF POPULAR PLANS. 833-398-0526 HANDYMAN Careful & Reliable Serving GARDEN CITY and surrounding area since 2003 Repairs & Installations of all types Carpentry, Moldings, Lighting and More 35-yr Nassau Resident References Lic#170101 Phone/Text Friendly Frank: 516-238-2112 Email: Frankcav@optonline.net MADE IN THE SHADE CUSTOM WINDOW TREATMENTS Blinds, Shades, Shutters, Draperies Top Brands at Discount Prices! Family owned & operated www.madeintheshadensli.com 516-426-2890 MASONRY All types of stonework Pavers, Retaining Walls, Belgium Block Patios, Foundations, Seal coating, Concrete and Asphalt driveways, Sidewalks, Steps. Free Estimates Fully Licensed & Insured #H2219010000 Boceski Masonry Louie 516-850-4886 PAULIE THE ROOFER STOPPING LEAKS IS MY SPECIALTY! Slate & Tile Specialistsn All types of Roofing Local References Licensed & Insured 516-621-3869 HOME IMPROVEMENTS WIREMAN/CABLEMAN Flat TVs mounted, Phone, TVs & Computer wiring installed & serviced, camera & stereos, HDTVAntennasFREE TV www. davewireman.com 516-433-WIRE (9473 631-667-WIRE (9473) or TEXT516-353-1118 PAINTING & PAPERHANGING MICHELANGELO PAINTING & WALLPAPER Interior, Exterior, Plaster/Spackle, Light Carpentry, Decorative Moldings & Power Washing. Call: 516-328-7499 MARKETPLACE, AUTOMOTIVE, REAL ESTATE, SERVICES REQUEST A FREE QUOTE CALL NOW BEFORE THE NEXT POWER OUTAGE (877) 516-1160 Prepare for power outages today WITH A HOME STANDBY GENERATOR $0 MONEY DOWN + LOW MONTHLY PAYMENT OPTIONS Contact a Generac dealer for full terms and conditions *To qualify, consumers must request a quote, purchase, install and activate the generator with a participating dealer. Call for a full list of terms and conditions. FREE 7-Year Extended Warranty* – A $695 Value! LIST YOUR HOME IMPROVEMENT SERVICE HERE. CALL 516.307.1045 RE QU E S T A FREE QUO TE $0 DO WN F I NAN CI N G O PT IO N Prepare for Power Outages & Save Money ACT NOW TO RECEIVE A $300 SPECIAL OFFER!* (888) 871-0194 *Ofer value when purchased at retail. **Financing available through authorized Generac partners. Solar panels sold separately. PWRcell, Generac’s fully-integrated solar + battery storage system, stores solar energy that can power your whole home during utility power outages and save you money on your electric bill. STRONG AS STEEL WITH THE ATTRACTIVE LOOK OF VARIOUS ROOF STYLES Upgrade Your Home witha NEW METAL ROOF Guaranteed to Last a Lifetime! From Dimensional Shingles to classic styles reminiscent of Cedar Shake and Spanish Tile, an architectural roofng system by Erie Metal Roofs can enhance the beauty of your home while protecting your family and property for a lifetime. Call today to schedule your FREE ESTIMATE 1-855-492-6084 Made in the USA New orders only. Does not include material costs. Cannot be combined with any other offer. Minimum purchase required. Other restrictions may apply. This is an advertisement placed on behalf of Erie Construction Mid-West, Inc (“Erie”). Offer terms and conditions may apply and the offer may not be available in your area. Offer expires December 31, 2022. If you call the number provided, you consent to being contacted by telephone, SMS text message, email, pre-recorded messages by Erie or its affiliates and service providers using automated technologies notwithstanding if you are on a DO NOT CALL list or register. Please review our Privacy Policy and Terms of Use on homeservicescompliance.com. All rights reserved. LIMITED TIME OFFER 60% off TAKE AN ADDITIONAL 10 % off YOUR INSTALLATION Install for Military, Health Workers and First Responders + Warranty- Limited Lifetime. Transferable to subsequent owner from original purchaser. Terms and conditions apply. Hail up to 2.5”, Appearance of the surface coating beyond normal wear and tear. Limited time offer. Expires 12.31.22 855.281.6439 I Free Quotes American Made Family Owned Award Winning Could your kitchen use a little magic? Hearing Aids Starti ng at $799 Terms and conditions apply. Discount based on MSRP. Offer valid 10/1/22-12/31/22 at participating locations only on qualifying purchases. Jabra Enhance Plus not eligible for the discount. See locations for details. Benefits of hearing instruments may vary by type and degree of hearing loss, noise environment, accuracy of hearing evaluation and proper fit. Cannot be combined with any other promotions or discounts. Get Schedule Your FREE Hearing Screening (877) 503-2187 Beltone Hearing Aid Set* + A Free Cleaning Set with Purchase Limited Time Offer! withpurchase + EXCLUSIVE LIMITED TIME OFFER! Promo Code: 285 FINANCING THAT FITS YOUR BUDGET!1 Subject to credit approval. Call for details. FREE GUTTER ALIGNMENT + FREE GUTTER CLEANING* SENIORS & MILITARY! YOUR ENTIRE PURCHASE + 20%% OFFOFF 10 A FREE ESTIMATE YEAR-ROUND CLOG-FREE GUARANTEE 1-855-478-9473 FINANCING AVAILABLE WITH APPROVED CREDIT Call today and receive a FREE SHOWER PACKAGE PLUS $1600 OFF With purchase of a new Safe Step Walk-In Tub. Not applicable with any previous walk-in tub purchase. Offer available while supplies last. No cash value. Must present offer at time of purchase. CSLB 1082165 NSCB 0082999 0083445 1-855-916-5473 WE BUY & SELL ALL TYPES OF ELECTRIC TRAINS NEW•OLD•PRE & POST WAR•MODERN 631.909.2970 NOW OPEN IN MANORVILLE 460 COUNTY RD.111 OPEN 7 DAYS
54 Blank Slate Media Newspapers, Friday, December 16, 2022 SERVICES One time use only. Cannot be used in conjunction with any other coupon or offer. Coupon offer good until December 31, 2022. Valid for any new service except subscription fees. Must mention coupon at time of sale. from Physicians Mutual Insurance Company Call to get your FREE Information Kit 1-855-225-1434 Dental50Plus.com/nypress Product not available in all states. Includes the Participating (in GA: Designated) Providers and Preventive Benefits Rider. Acceptance guaranteed for one insurance policy/certificate of this type. Contact us for complete details about this insurance solicitation. This specific offer is not available in CO, NY; call 1-800-969-4781 or respond for similar offer. Certificate C250A (ID: C250E; PA: C250Q); Insurance Policy P150 (GA: P150GA; NY: P150NY; OK: P150OK; TN: P150TN). Rider kinds: B438, B439 (GA: B439B). 6208-0721 DENTAL Insurance 22 Planting Field Rd, Roslyn Heights, 11577 www.theisland360.com 821 Franklin Avenue, Suite 208 Garden City, NY 11530 (516) 294-8900 www.gcnews.com Are you raising a grandchild, young relative or child of a family friend in the absence of the biological parents? Then you’re a Kinship Caregiver! Want to keep your family healthy and safe? NYS Kinship Navigator provides information, referral and assistance with Help is just a phone call away. 877-454-6463 TTY: NY Relay 711 or 1-800-421-1220 NYS Kinship Navigator can help. One touch of a button sends help fast, 24/7. alone I’m never Life Alert® is always here for me. ® , / with GPS! For a FREE brochure call: 1-800-404-9776 Saving a Life EVERY 11 MINUTES PARTY HELP LADIES & GENTLEMEN RELAX & ENJOY Your Next Party! Catering and Experienced Professional Services for Assisting with Preparation, Serving and Clean Up Before, During and After Your Party Bartenders Available. Call Kate at 516-248-1545 SERVICES A & J MOVING & STORAGE: Established 1971. Long Island and New York State specialists. Residential, Commercial, Piano & Organ experts. Boxes available. Free estimates. www.ajmoving.com 516741-2657 114 Jericho Tpk, Mineola NYDOT# 10405 DISH TV $64.99 for 190 Channels + $14.95 High Speed Internet. Free Installation, Smart HD DVR Included, Free Voice Remote. Some restrictions apply. Promo expires 1/21/23 Call 1-866-595-6967 LEAK REPAIRS Plumbing Repairs Bathrooms, Showers, Kitchens 24 HOUR SERVICE Call 516-668-5624 SERVICES MAGNUM SECURITY SYSTEMS, INC. Serving Garden City for 40 years. Let Magnum Upgrade Your Existing Security System. Burglar & Fire Alarms Cellular Radio 3G Upgrades Remote Access Call: 516-486-5484 PASSION FOR SENIORS Certified 24 hour care available. Also Nassau Locations. Trained in Dementia and AlzheimCall 718-850-3400 HEALTH SERVICES FAMILY CARE CONNECTIONS, LLC Dr. PMHCNS-BC Doctor of Nursing Practice Advanced Practice Nurse Care Manager Assistance with Aging at Home/Care Coordintion Nursing Home & Assisted Living Placement PRI / Screens / Mini Mental Status Exams Medicaid Eligibility and Apllications 516248-9323 www.familycareconnections. com 901 Stewart Ave, Ste 230 Garden City, NY 11530 SUBMIT YOUR PRESS RELEASES AND NEWS ITEMS ONLINE AT THEISLAND360.COM/ SUBMIT-NEWS
55 Blank Slate Media Newspapers, Friday, December 16, 2022 www.theisland360com www.gcnews.com Herald Courier Great Neck News Manhasset Times Roslyn Times Williston Times Port Washington Times 22 Planting Field Road, Roslyn Heights, NY 11577 • Office: 516.307.1045 • Fax: 516.307.1046 NEW HYDE PARK
‘Make a Child Smile’ toy, food drive Raising funds Children’s Center
Nassau County Legislator Delia DeRiggi-Whitton (D–Glen Cove) recently visited the Port Washington Police Department to deliver donated toys for Port Washington’s “Make a Child Smile” Toy & Food Drive.
Organized by the Police Department and the Port Washington Chamber of Commerce, new unwrapped toys and
non-perishable food are dropped off at participating businesses, which are then delivered to the Police Station on Port Washington Boulevard for sorting.
The donated toys and food are brought to local outreach centers and given to Port Washington families to make their holidays brighter.
The Port Washington Children’s Center will soon begin its 2022-23 fundraiser to improve its playground.
Coming out of COVID-19, the Center has been working to provide social and emotional health for the children they serve. The playground is aged and needs updates to provide interactive play for all children. The Children’s Center is excited to create a sensory garden, open up its outdoor theater into a classroom and upgrade all play equipment.
“Whenever we say ‘We are going to play in the playground’ — our children are instantly excited to spend time outdoors on our Playground.” Bernadette Horvath, who has worked at the Children’s Center for over 20 years, said. “As time goes on and our needs change, we do need to update our playground to help our children have the best experience. With an updated playground and outdoor learning classroom, our children would have the opportunity to have a great connection to nature.”
Founded in 1977, the Port Washington Children’s Center is a nonprofit childcare and after-school provider for children aged 18 months to 11 years.
Over the summer, the nonprofit runs Port Day Camp, providing over 300 children with fun, interactive and exciting programs over the summer.
Upcoming Developments: Port Washington Children’s Center is now
the after-school program provided for all Port Washington elementary schools! Starting in January 2023, after-school will be in every elementary school — Daly, Manor Haven, Sousa, Salem and Guggenheim.
Pre-registration is now open. Please
visit their website homepage. For more information on Port Washington Children’s Center and to donate, please visit our website at pwchildrenscenter.org and check out our fundraising video on YouTube at YouTube.com/@pwchildrenscenter.
B.I.D grant for Prine Podiatry
The Greater Port Washington Business Improvement welcomes Prine Podiatry to Port Washington.
Prine Podiatry is a recent recipient of funds from the Sign Grant Program offered by the Greater Port Washington B.I.D. The team of doctors at Prine Podiatry provide a full spectrum of podiatry services as part of Prine Health Group.
“PRINE Podiatry, a division of PRINE Health is grateful to be the recipient of a grant from the Port Washington BID to help erect a beautiful office sign.
Two excellent, caring PRINE podiatrists Dr. Dana Hemlall and Dr. Ruby Gardner are now practicing at the Port Washington location. Both doctors received training at The NY College of Podiatric Medicine and completed their residencies at NYU Langone- Long Island.” said Business Development Manager, Rebecca Hecht.
Along with routine foot care, Hemlall says that she looks forward to addressing the needs of the Pt Washington community with new innovative podiatric treatment options.
Gardner shares these sentiments and would like patients to know that she also specializes as a foot surgeon managing diabetic foot disorders and wound care. PRINE Podiatry accepts Medicare and most insurances.
“I was pleased to meet the doctors and staff of the Prine Podiatry office and represent the Port Washington B.I.D. to welcome them to Main Street. The Port Washington B.I.D. endeavors to support businesses like Prine Podiatry who are dedicated to improving the aesthetics of our commercial district with new, attractive signage.” says Holly Byrne, executive director at the Port Washington B.I.D.
Prine Podiatry is located at 36B Main Street. Office hours are held Monday through Friday. Augustina, a beloved office manager who worked for many years with Dr. Kaplan, has transitioned over to PRINE and is happy to answer any questions and schedule appointments.
She can be reached at 516-482-5999. To learn more about their team of physicians visit https://prinehealth. com/podiatry/.
Eligible businesses, both new and established within the defined business district can apply for grants for funding to assist with the costs of improvements to the façade of the place of business and/or signage.
Guidelines and applications, along with additional resources for business owners, can be found on the Port Washington B.I.D. website under the Business Resource heading. Inquiries can also be directed to the Port Washington B.I.D. Office at 516-883-8890.
56 The Port Washington Times, Friday, December 16, 2022 PW COMMUNITY NEWS
PHOTO COURTESY OF THE PORT WASHINGTON CHILDREN’S CENTER
The Port Washington Children’s Center will soon begin its 2022-23 playground fundraising campaign.
PHOTO COURTESY OF LEGISLATOR DERIGGI-WHITTON’S OFFICE
Port Washington Police Detective Tony Guzzello, Legislator DeRiggiWhitton and Port Washington Police Chief Robert Del Muro pose with toys donated for the Toy & Food Drive.
You can access us in print and online Local stories, sports & entertainment All at your fingertips www.theisland360.com
N. Hempstead honors Schreiber Vikings athletics
COMMUNITY NEWS
Port Washington looks so beautiful and festive for the holidays! The Port Washington Chamber of Commerce has decorated the lampposts throughout town with garland, twinkling lights and red bows.
First & Second Grade Book Discussion: 12/19/2022 @ 4:00 pm. Children’s Workshop Room. Monthly book discussion for children in frst and second grade. Registration required.
Teen Gaming: 12/20/2022 @ 3:30 pm. Mezzanine Meeting Room. Teens in grades 7-12 are invited to play Nintendo Switch games with other teens after school. No registration required.
Third & Fourth Grade Book Discussion: 12/20/2022 @ 4:00 pm. Children’s Workshop Room. Monthly book discussion for children in third and fourth grade. Registration required.
Pajama Story Time on Zoom: 12/20/2022 @ 7:00 pm. Online. Put on some comfy pajamas, grab your favorite stufed animal, and gather around to enjoy some books, rhymes, and songs. Registration required.
Fiction Book Club: Hamnet by Maggie O’Farrell: 12/20/2022 @ 7:30 pm. Hagedorn Meeting Room. Maggie O’Farrell’s Hamnet is both a brilliant re-creation of the lives of William Shakespeare and his family in late 16th-century Stratford-upon-Avon and an emotionally intense account of the death of the dramatist’s young son and its painful aftermath. Mainly told through the eyes of Shakespeare’s herbalist wife Agnes, Hamnet shifts between the early 1580s, when she and William meet, and 1596, when the couple resides in a small apartment next to her in-laws’ house. William struggles to escape his overbearing father and the family’s glove-making business to pursue his writing career. O’Farrell excels at evoking the essence of the Shakespeares’ daily lives in Stratford, from the claustrophobia of the family’s dwelling to the beauty of Agnes’ beloved forest, where she gathers plants to fashion her potions. Graceful and moving, Hamnet is a triumph of literary and historical fction. Copies of the book are available on Libby and may also be reserved for pickup at the library.
STEAM Workshop: 12/22/2022 @ 4:00 pm. Children’s Workshop Room. Create a confetti cannon to help ring in the New Year. For children in 4th to 6th grade. Sponsored by the Donald and Barbara Zucker Family Foundation. Registration required.
PLEASE NOTE — There will be no Sandwiched-In program on 12/23.
For the latest news, visit us at www.theisland360.com
The BID has installed lit snowfakes on the utility poles. Residents Forward created a winter wonderland in the garden in front of the train station. And stores throughout town have outdone themselves with beautiful decorations for the holiday season and the Port Holiday Magic Window Decorating Contest.Fifteen stores participated and the judges said it was a real challenge to pick just three winners. In fact there was a two-way tie for third place!
The judges said they were impressed by the efort and creativity that went into so many of the window displays. The window contest judges were Trish Class of Residents Forward, Town Council member Mariann Dalimonte and Bayside Tax & Wealth owner and chamber board member Corey Peterson.
The judges’ votes have been tallied and the following store windows were named the “best of the best.”
First Place: Painting With Flowers, 298 Main St.
Second Place: Wellground, 917 Port Washington Blvd.
Third Place — tie:
Port Washington Florist, 75 Manorhaven Blvd. The Cooking Lab, 160 Main St.
All the stores that entered the contest were winners, as their windows announce to everyone that they care about the community and promote the holiday spirit in our town. This season, you and your family and friends can view all the participating windows and see how you would have voted. The other locations are:
Port Washington Blvd. Area: Orangetheory Fitness, 1013 Port Washington Blvd. Waterzooi, 1029 Port Washington Blvd.
Main Street Area: S.F. Falconer Florsit, 8 S. Maryland Ave. Arena Sports, 52 Main St. Yummy Gyro, 82 Main St.
Port Pop Up Boutique, 142 Main St.
Steiner’s Pastry Shop, 148 Main St.
Port’s best store windows Upcoming events at the Port Library
Tori’s Place Ear Piercing, 167 Main St.
Shields Plumbing & Hardware, 267 Main St. The Local Market, 273 Main St.
Lexie, NY, 334A Main St.
Residents are reminded that stores throughout the community have very special holiday sales going on all season. Keep the magic home, try Port frst for the holidays.
For an up-to-date directory of businesses located in Port Washington, including many that ofer online shopping, download the Try Port First app or visit www.pwcoc.org.
57 The Port Washington Times, Friday, December 16, 2022 PW
Council Member Mariann Dalimonte recently visited Paul D. Schreiber High School in Port Washington to celebrate the Vikings’ outstanding fall 2022 season.
Dalimonte presented the student-athletes with certifcates of recognition for their achievements and for their dedication to their sport.
PHOTO PROVIDED BY THE TOWN OF NORTH HEMPSTEAD
SCHOOL NEWS
Sports
Barbot twins dominate for state champs St. Mary’s
BY MICHAEL J. LEWIS
They say it only happened one time, but Taryn and Taylor Barbot remember the details exactly.
The 17-year-old twin basketball stars were playing an AAU game a few years back, and an opponent was getting a little rough on Taryn.
Fouls were called, but the physical play kept up. Finally, Taylor, the younger sister by one minute, went up to the opponent with some harsh words.
“I told her to knock it off and got up in her face a little bit,” Taylor said.
“And that was the end of her fouling me hard,” Taryn said with a smile.
The Barbot twins are as easygoing and friendly as you could imagine off the court, but the Manhasset St. Mary’s seniors are certainly not to be messed with on it.
The Floral Park kids who’ve been wowing spectators since they were in first grade, earning the nickname “The Tornado Twins” are back for one final season with the Gaels.
And they’ll have to work very hard to create an encore to their magical junior season in 2021-22. With 5-foot-9 Taryn playing every position and scoring at will, and 5-foot-8 point guard Taylor dishing out assists and defending hard, St. Mary’s captured its first Catholic High School
Athletic Association state championship since 1994.
In the state championship game, Taryn was unstoppable, scoring 19 points, grabbing 18 rebounds and six assists.
It was a triumph three years in the making, and the girls said they’re not finished, not at all.
“It was really special because we’ve been working hard to bring a title back here; they’ve had so many great teams in the past,” Taylor said before a recent preseason practice. “And now that we’ve won one, we know we have a target on our backs, and you don’t want to let up. You want to do it again.”
St. Mary’s coach Kevin White, who has been scouting and watching the Barbots since they were playing on the Brooklyn Stars AAU team in middle school, said he’s the “luckiest coach” to have gotten to direct them.
“You always want good athletes and more importantly good people from good families, and they have just been so great for our program,” White said. “Taylor, she’s a pass-first point guard who always makes good decisions and gets people to their spots.
“And Taryn, she’s a Swiss Army knife, she does a little bit of everything for us, scoring, rebounding, defending, she can guard all five positions.
“I probably rely on Taryn too much,
but she’s just really good at everything.”
The Barbots’ basketball journey began in Floral Park, where they’re from, when mom Theran and Dad Thierry started trying the girls out in different sports.
Hoops quickly became their favorite,
and the battles on the driveway and in the neighborhood playgrounds were fierce.
“Our parents would have to separate us sometimes,” Taryn recalled.
“It could get pretty violent,” Taylor chimed in. “But once we got inside the house, we were friends again.”
“But still,” Taryn said, “Coach Kevin won’t let us guard each other in practice now. He doesn’t want to know what might happen.”
The Barbots arrived at St. Mary’s as freshmen and saw their season interrupted by Covid, which turned out to be partially a blessing, Taylor said.
“We got to practice more and work on our games,” she said.
White said both arrived at St. Mary’s with very strong bases of skills, and that each worked their way into the starting lineup toward the end of the abbreviated freshman season.
“I did tell them then and still tell them now, they look for each other on the court a little too much,” he said. “But they’re really good at getting everyone involved, and making sure the team is ready to play at all times.”
All that skill caught the eye of many Division I college coaches, with Richmond, Albany and Fairleigh Dickinson in hot pursuit.
But it was the College of Charleston, a solid mid-major D-1 program, that pursued the Barbots the hardest and won their names on a scholarship.
“They were always checking in on us and watching us and really showed us a lot of love,” Taylor said. “And the campus is beautiful. I’m excited to go there.”
Taryn said she’s undecided on a college major, but Taylor is confident of her career path: She wants to be an OBGYN and help African-American women as much as possible.
“There’s a lot of history of black women being treated unfairly in the medical community, and a lot of doctors not believing their pain is real, and their symptoms are real,” Taylor said. “Black women die at a higher rate in childbirth than (non-black women). So I really want to see if I can help with that.”
St. Mary’s senior basketball player Taryn Balbot helped lead her school to a CHSAA state championship last season.
Last season Taylor and Taryn took their games to a new level, with Taylor averaging eight points, eight assists and four boards per contest, while Taryn poured in 24 points, 10 rebounds and five assists per game.
A noble goal for the future, no doubt. For now, the Barbots will try to bring one more banner to their little school on Northern Boulevard.
“It would be really nice to get another chip,” Taryn said. “Everyone at this school has been so supportive and so nice, that it would be so great to go out with one more.”
47th Community Chest Thanksgiving Run winners
Almost 3,200 runners and walkers took part in the 47th Annual 2022 Port Washington Thanksgiving Day 5-Mile Run presented by the Community Chest of Port Washington and the Town of North Hempstead.
The top race finisher was 19-year-old Luke Ellwood with a time of 25:19, followed by 22-year old Matthew Fusco (25:36) and 18-year old Colin Funk (26:10), all of Port Washington. The top female finishers were 37-yearold Theresa McCabe (29:00) of Manhasset, 27-year-old Jessica Donohue (30:40) of Glen Head and 27-year old Gillian Lowden (31:37) of Port Washington. In the male 9-12 age category, Port runners reigned supreme with Cub Romero of Port Washington in first (36:01), Kush Taparia in second (38:52) and Hudson Elders in third (38:59). Port runners also took the top three spots in the female 9-12 age category. Alyssa Scheinzbach came in first (36:47), followed by Addison Ahmuty (39:50) and Sofia Vinti (44:58).In the male 13-15 age category, Julian Kimball of Sands Point finished first (30:19), followed by Will Ahmuty in second (31:00) and Riley Funk in third (31:26). In the female 13-15 age
category, Ashley Carillo (32:14) of Port Washington and Lucy Thomas (34:11) of Baton Rouge, La. finished first and second. In the male and female 16-19 age categories, Luke Ellwood (25:19) of Port and Sheyla Zakashansky (31:43) of New York came in first; Colin Funk (26:10) and Eve Siff-Scherr (34:44), both from Port, came in second; and William Schimitsch (29:06) and Caroline Schimitsch (38:09), both of Little Neck, came in third.In the female 20-24 age group, Port Washington’s Ellie Davis (31:51) finished first and in the female 30-34 age group Woodbury’s Esther Lok (33:25)
finished first.The top three finishers in the Men’s 50-54 age group were all Port Washington residents: Chris Elders (34:00), Daniel Valderrama (34:27) and Seth Mondschein (35:04). Meanwhile in the female 35-39 age group, Theresa McCabe of Manhasset finished first, followed by Port’s own Alisa Holzer and Devon Bordenick.Awards were given to the top three finishers overall (male and female) and to the top three finishers (male and female) in 16 different age categories.Top finisher in the female 80+ category was 83-year-old Dorothy Bheddah and top finisher in the male
80+ category was 80-year old Diarmuid White.“We’d like to thank our dedicated Community Chest volunteers, our sponsors and the amazing support of the Port Washington community that made this year’s Thanksgiving Day run a great success,” said Bobby Keller, executive director, Community Chest of Port Washington.Over the 47-year history of the race wonderful traditions have been created including, the annual Apple pie raffle, which has been generously funded by Race Event Sponsor, the Peter & Jeri Dejana Foundation. One hundred Youngs Farms Apple pies were distributed to lucky winners, who picked up their pies at the finish line.
New this year, Catholic Health arranged to have an Orthopedic Care team, including St. Francis Hospital Orthopedic Surgeon Michael Kang standing by at the finish line to evaluate any injuries suffered by race participants and attendees. Race day started at 8:00 am with a yoga stretch, presented by Yoga Life and concluded with commemorative Race medals presented to everyone who finished the race. Thirsty participants were provided water bottles supplied by Glen Cove Beer distributers and all finishers received
apples supplied by R Best Produce and Uncle Giuseppe’s. Officially sanctioned and certified by USA Track and Field, the Thanksgiving Day Run is co-presented by the Town of North Hempstead and assisted by the Port Washington Police and Fire Medics, the Sands Point Police and the Nassau County Police, along with the Villages of Manorhaven, Sands Point, Baxter Estates and Port Washington North. The run’s technical director is David Katz, founder of Finish Line Road Race Technicians.
FLRRT, a pioneer and innovator of modern road race technology, calculates timing and results and post results at www.FLRRT. com. Sponsors for the 2022 Thanksgiving Day Run include: Event Sponsor; The Peter & Jeri Dejana Foundation, Co-SponsorTown of North Hempstead, Orthopedic Care Sponsor- Catholic Health- St Francis Hospital & Heart Center, Gold SponsorsLEVITON and M&T Bank, Medal & Midway Sponsors; Crown Trophy, Baker Air, Kornhaber Dental Group Silver Sponsors Alper’s, Orange Theory, Louie’s, Lorber Hoffman, Palm Bay International, Harding Real Estate, Gold Coast Chiropractic, Chief Graphix, Red Feather Sponsor Glen Cove Beer
Distributors, Bronze Sponsors Arena Graphics, Haven Auto Body, Pro Plumbing, Unlimited Sports Action, Bendix Engineering, P.C., NY Environmental, Craig Botts, North Shore Podiatry, Yoga Life, CastleRock Contracting, PW Federal Credit Union, Creative Snow by Cow Bay, Gulfway Marine, PW College Consulting, Douglas Elliman; Alexis Siegel & Amy Rosenberg Team, Mojito Café & Lounge, Gold Coast Family Dental, Goldeneye Construction, Sands Point Center for Health & Rehabilitation, Spensieri Construction, Zelin & Associates CPA, Apples; R Best Produce & Uncle Giuseppe’s.
The Community Chest is a non-profit organization whose mission is to raise funds for distribution to local charities dedicated to improving the lives of Port Washingtonians. Community Chest grants support programs for senior citizens, children, teenagers, and others in need—programs that serve approximately 7,000 Port Washington residents. To learn more about the Community Chest of Port Washington or to find out how you can support the Chest, contact the Community Chest at (516) 767-2121 or visit the website at www.portchest.org.
58 Blank Slate Media Newspapers, Friday, December 16, 2022
PHOTO COURTESY OF BARBOT FAMILY
Thank
CO-PRESENTERS
Port Washington, Nassau County, and Sands Point Police Departments Port Washington Fire Medics Town of North Hempstead Department of Parks & Recreation, Highway Department & the Ofce of Councilwoman Mariann Dalimonte
Villages of Baxter Estates, Manorhaven, Port Washington North & Sands Point Nassau County Department of Public Works
Peter & Jeri Dejana Foundation, Jean-Marie Posner
Finish Line Road Race Technicians, David Katz
Baker Air, Kris Baker Yoga Life, Drew Kane PW Boy Scouts Troop 7, Howard Hernandez Schreiber Key Club members
St. Francis Hospital - Dr. Michael Kang AND the too-many-to-name Community Volunteers
Scafdi Scherr Silverstein Taylor
Vultaggio Zack
59 The Port Washington Times, Friday, December 16, 2022 PW S I L V E R S P O N S O R S To all our Charity Heroes
The Community
of
The
of
AND THOSE WHO HELPED MAKE IT HAPPEN…
Chest
Port Washington
Town
North Hempstead
You! www.portchest.org | 516-767-2121 | info@portchest.org | 382 Main Street, PW 11050 Community Chest of Port Washington is a nonprofit whose grants have helped the People of Port live happier & healthier lives for over 70 years. 236181 M SILVER SPONSORS Community Chest TDR Committee Family Sponsors Haven Auto Body 516-883-5491 ORTHOPEDIC CARE SPONSOR GOLD SPONSORS MEDAL & MID WAY
Adler
Baker Baltic Barr Bass
Caruso Danow Del Vecchio Desmond
Duran Eisner
Noal Goldfarb, Chair Ross Baltic - Rachel Fox - Lisa Hendrickson - Paul Oliveri Co-Chairs Skip Stern, Mark Mogul, Jennifer Wilson Pines, Jerry Federlein, John Neil, Bob O’Brien, Particia Carbo, Nancy Nevins, Roy Nelson M.D., David Katz
Albanese
Carbo-Fox
Doshi Drouzas
Epstein Farber Froccaro J&J Froccaro J&L Goldfarb Goren Greenblatt Hershkowitz Holtzman Honjo Kanavos Kozinn Littman Leder McConnell McDermott Mogul Nauer-Birbiglia Nevins Oliveri Perceval
RED FEATHER SPONSOR EVENT & PIE SPONSOR BRONZE SPONSORS
We are f lled with gratitude to our Sponsors, Donors, Fundraisers, Volunteers and Participants for making the 2022 Port Washington Tanksgiving Day Run a GIANT success!
It never occurred to me what a huge impact having a realtor who is a leader in her field, one who generates a high volume of sales, could have on heightening the profile and exposure of our home. Thank you Heidi!
SELLER TESTIMONIAL
-
Heidi knew exactly what we wanted from the start, and worked with us honestly and diligently. She always made herself available no matter the day or time. Heidi took a very stressful situation for us and turned it into a success story!
BUYER TESTIMONIAL
-
danielgale.com
Heidi Karagianis
Associate Real Estate Broker | Gold Circle of Excellence 516.466.4036, c.516.467.9440 | heidikaragianis@danielgale.com
60 The Port Washington Times, Friday, December 16, 2022 PW
Each Ofce is Independently Owned and Operated
You don’t need magic to get into your dream home this holiday season just the right realtor.
“ “ ” ”