When George Santos was elected to represent New York’s 3rd Congressional District in 2022, Glen Cove resident Paula Erome remembers being stunned...
Sea Cliff residents will have the opportunity to stroll, shop, and soak in a celebration at the heart of the village on May 3 from noon to 4 p.m...
Southern State Parkway Series
One bright Saturday afternoon in June 2020, a group of protesters stood near the Robert Moses statue in Babylon, calling for its removal. Their rallying cry: The “Master Builder” was not worthy of such recognition.
The North Shore School District’s annual Art Walk, organized by the nonprofit arts booster clubs, the Arts Angels, has dazzled residents once again this April...
Sea Cliff School first graders took to the stage on April 8 to celebrate the annual Fairy Tale Ball...
On March 2, a day of fun, rhyme, and sweet indulgence unfolded at Scoop N Fruit, located at 6 School Street, Glen Cove. The event, inspired by the whimsical world of Dr. Seuss, drew a lively crowd of residents
The North Shore School District unveiled its $125 million proposed budget for the upcoming year, a roughly 2.4 percent increase from the prior year with increasing costs stemming from employee benefits, rising salaries as well as the implementation of a new curriculum. After the presentation, nearly a dozen residents spoke during the public comment portion of the evening focused on a different matter: the soon-to-expire moratorium on the building of battery energy storage systems in the town of Oyster Bay.
Columnist
For many immigrants, coming to the United States without legal documentation isn’t an act of criminality, but an act of survival — an effort to escape violence, political persecution or a situation so dire that the only option is to flee.
Columnist
If we’re serious about clean energy, grid reliability and energy security the RAPID Act is our path toward resiliency and sustainability.
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New York is experiencing a solid-waste crisis, with skyrocketing costs to municipalities, abysmal recycling rates, and plastic pollution littering our communities and waterways.
Columnist
During my years in Congress, no issue was more vital or intensely personal to me than ensuring that all of the surviving victims of the attacks of Sept. 11 receive the care they require and deserve for the illnesses caused by the toxins they breathed in at ground zero in the days, weeks and months afterward.