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Friday, July 15, 2016
Vol. 76, No. 29
PETS, HOW TO winthrop eyes merger TOWN EYES GUIDEs with nyu langone VAPE SHOP REGULATION PAGEs 31-42
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Haig, district work toward settlement Negotiations to continue after 8-hour talks on first hearing date By N o a h M a n s k a r Attorneys for the East Williston School District and a suspended Wheatley School teacher, Matthew Haig, may reach a settlement rather than proceed with disciplinary hearings in which the district is seeking his termination. The school district and Haig, a 30-year social studies teacher, will continue to negotiate a settlement in the coming weeks after nearly eight hours of talks at the Wheatley School on Tuesday, when hearings were set to begin on charges against Haig of insubordination, neglect of duty and conduct unbecoming a teacher. “I feel confident that things will work out in the long run that will leave me in a position to continue to do what I have a passion for, which is teach,” Haig said. If both sides reach a settlement before Aug. 10, the next scheduled hearing date, the case against Haig will not proceed, said Andrew Costello, his attorney. The parties
will try to settle their differences that day with a hearing officer, Stuart Bauchner, present If they cannot reach an agreement before then, Costello said. Hearings will start if they reach an impasse. The agreement is not final, but it could involve a letter of reprimand being placed in Matthew Haig’s personnel file to which he may be able to respond, said Michael Haig, Matthew Haig’s brother, who was in the room with Matthew Haig and Costello Tuesday. The sides were also negotiating whether Matthew Haig, a Brentwood resident, would serve a “symbolic” paid suspension in addition to the three months he has already been suspended, Michael Haig said. Costello said he and Haig were ready to start hearings Tuesday morning. Costello declined to discuss the terms of the settlement, but said the parties were close to an agreement and that he was satisfied with the progress they made. Continued on Page 53
A unifying win
PHOTO courtesy of gabriel marques
Susana Soares Sousa and her family were among the Portuguese-Americans who flooded Mineola Boulevard on Sunday to celebrate Portugal’s national soccer team’s victory in the UEFA European Championship. See story on page 3.
Endorsement draws fire from other 3rd track foes B y N o a h M a n s k a r Senate candidate, Elaine Phil- sion coalition opposing the LIRR’s Some members of a Floral Park-based group opposing the Long Island Rail Road’s third track project criticized its leader’s support for a Republican state
lips, saying their fight should stay nonpartisan. An officer of the South Side Civic Association, Matthew Sexton, said Bill Corbett, leader of the Citizens Against Rail Expan-
$1.5 billion, 9.8-mile proposal, should be removed from the Village of Floral Park’s Third Track Task Force following his endorsement last week of Phillips to Continued on Page 53
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