Keyword: Peter Weber
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Hewlett-Woodmere Deputy Superintendent Dr. Peter Weber, who also serves as the school district’s business administrator, will retire on June 30, 2016. He will be the third administrator to step down in one year. more
Hewlett-Woodmere School District Superintendent Dr. Joyce Bisso officially announced at Tuesday’s Board of Education meeting that she will retire after the 2014-15 school year. Her effective retirement date is June 30. more
The proposed 2014-15 Hewlett-Woodmere School District budget totals just under $112.1 million, includes a 2.1 percent tax levy increase — the state’s cap for the district — and is 2.27 percent larger than the current spending plan. more
Howard Goldstein was one of only a few residents who attended the Hewlett-Woodmere School District’s budget forum on March 27. He said that at one time, these meetings were well attended, but people seem to care less and less as they pay more and more in taxes. more
Lawrence School District tops the list of school districts with “moderate” financial strain among the 23 school districts around the state in the same grouping, including five others on Long Island, based on the indicators used to create the first state comptroller’s report on the fiscal stress of New York’s 674 school districts. more
Residents in the Lawrence and Hewlett school districts can vote on their respective budgets and for Board of Education candidates on Tuesday. more
Although Hewlett resident Howard Goldstein’s two sons have graduated from high school and no longer attend the Hewlett-Woodmere School District, he decided to come to the budget forum on March 22. Goldstein was curious about how the state’s new 2 percent tax-levy cap would affect the district’s spending plan for 2012-13. more
Directors, principals, assistant principals, chairpersons, guidance counselors, psychologists and social workers with at least 10 years in the Hewlett-Woodmere School District were offered 40 percent of their final year’s salary if they retire at the end of the 2011-’12 or 2012-’13 school years. more
Due to the financial constraints of the current economic climate and the state’s 2 percent tax levy cap, the Hewlett-Woodmere School District is seeking to lessen its fiscal burden by offering its veteran administrators and principals an incentive to retire. more
The Hewlett-Woodmere School District has been awarded the “highest quality” rating of Aa1 from the credit rating agency Moody’s Corporation, which will result in lower borrowing costs for the district and the ability to refinance bonds at lower interest rates. more
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