Serving Roslyn, Roslyn Heights and Old Westbury
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Friday, March 17, 2017
Vol. 5, No. 11
YOUR BIG BREAK, ROUND II PAGE 25
CHANGES COMING TO CURRAN PROMISES VILLAGE GOVS TOP SPOTS FOR WOMEN PAGE 2
Roslyn Harbor receives F in transparency
PAGE 6
ON YOUR MARK
N.S. villages averaged a D rating in the audit conducted over 16 months BY ST E P H E N ROMANO AND NOAH MANSKAR North Shore villages scored below average in a Press Club of Long Island audit that graded Long Island municipalities and government agencies on New York State Freedom of Information Law requirements. The audit, which was conducted over 16 months and graded the responsiveness of 195 municipalities on a 0 to 100 scale, found that villages on the North Shore averaged a 66.2 or D rating, lower than the C average for all governments and agencies. Three North Shore villages, Flower Hill, Thomaston and Roslyn Estates, all received A grades, while seven received Fs. Twenty-four percent of the governments and agencies “failed to maintain their own FOIL policies required by law,” the audit found, while 64 percent failed
to respond to the Press Club’s request within the legal deadline. The audit was conducted by Timothy Bolger, managing editor of the Long Island Press and freedom of information chair for the Press Club, the Long Island chapter of the Society of Professional Journalists. “If the Long Island governments and agencies we tested were high school students with a cumulative grade of a C, they would not be getting into the college of their choice,” Bolger said in the report. The Press Club based its grading on several criteria, including meeting the five-day legal deadline to acknowledge the FOIL request; providing a list of employees, including names, titles, offices and salaries; providing a subject matter listing, which lists the types of records kept on file; providing a copy of the policy regarding protocol for responding Continued on Page 47
PHOTO COURTESY OF THE ROSLYN SCHOOL DISTRICT
Roslyn High School Junior Orry Zayit placed second in the 100 yard butterly in the New York State Public High School Athletic Association’s State Championships. See stsory on page 47.
Woman fighting cancer holds Roslyn art exhibition BY M A X Z A H N One hundred fifty people attended an art exhibition opening at the Roslyn Village Gallery on Sunday to see the paintings of Myra Fox, who suf-
fers from a severe form of brain cancer that has rendered her unable to speak or walk. She “had a smile on her face the whole time,” said Jillian Fox, her daughter. “You could tell she was happy to see
people.” Myra Fox, a resident of Roslyn from 2001 to 2015, began painting oil and water color works 30 years ago. “Local artists know her,” Continued on Page 46
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