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July 11, 2003
Eastern Island, Glen Cove
From East Beach Drive, looking southward, towards Stanco Memorial Park.
Near Lattingtown, Glen Cove, Nassau, NY.
Posted by dc at 12:34 AM | Comments (2)
July 08, 2003
Oyster Bay, Huntington vs Illegal Apartments
New Agency Created To Battle Illegal Apts.
Oyster Bay supervisor eyes September start date
By Pat Burson, STAFF WRITER
2003 July 03
Responding to complaints about illegal apartments in Oyster Bay, Supervisor
John Venditto said he is creating a new department and hiring more housing
inspectors to go after violators.
"Illegal housing generally results in unsafe conditions because it is often
constructed without regard to town building and fire codes," Venditto said.
The new Illegal Housing Division, which will operate under the Department of
Planning and Development, is to begin operations by September, Venditto added.
It will be headed by John Paider, the supervisor's special counsel, who with fire
prevention inspector James Baudille led a pilot program to investigate
complaints.
Venditto said the agency would hire five to 10 inspectors from among town
employees or individuals on the civil service list. The job would pay roughly
$31,000 a year plus benefits, he said.
"They will be highly trained, specialized and familiar with the laws and with the
type of evidence to be brought up in a court of law for convictions," he said.
The pilot program and a yearlong study of the illegal housing problem by a town
board-appointed task force preceded the creation of the new division. The task
force, which reported its findings to Venditto in July 2001, made several
recommendations, including assigning inspectors to work evenings and
weekends; documenting "unusual" entrances as well as the number of
mailboxes, electrical meters, doorbells and cars at a residence; and issuing
violations to tenants as well as landlords. Those measures are among some the
new division would undertake.
Violators could face misdemeanor charges, escalating fines starting at $350 and
court action. However, Venditto emphasized the objective is to get tenants and
landlords to comply with the law. "We don't want to fine people or punish
people," he said. "We want our quality of life restored."
Councilwoman Bonnie Eisler, who served on the task force, said she would prefer
Oyster Bay follow Huntington town's approach to allow code-enforcement officers
to presume the existence of illegal apartments if the town finds more than one
mailbox, utility meter or other signs of multiple residences in a one-family home,
and create a bureau to hear and prosecute violations.
"It's very important what Huntington did," she said. " ... [Venditto's plan] doesn't
guarantee access. When you ring somebody's door and you say you're from the
town, they don't have to let you in."
Venditto said the town attorney is reviewing Huntington's effort, but stressed that
his initiative is based on a pilot program that showed intensifying efforts and
more inspectors would eliminate the town's illegal housing problem.
While Eisler is skeptical, Bill Manton, president of the Breezy Point Civic
Association in Massapequa who also sat on the task force, is hopeful the new
division will make a dent in the problem.
"These were things that we had discussed, so it's good that they took some of
those recommendations and they're going to put them into some type of action,"
Manton said.
Copyright © 2003, Newsday, Inc.
http://www.newsday.com/news/printedition/longisland/ny-lioyst033356683jul03,0,7582792.story?coll=ny-linews-archive
Posted by dc at 11:17 PM | Comments (1)
July 07, 2003
Freeport alien worker site
Freeport Hiring Site Works Out
Tide turns for laborer haven
By Bart Jones STAFF WRITER
2003 July 04
When the Freeport day laborer hiring site opened in September, so few workers
showed up most days that coordinator Oscar Cortes thought the project might
flop.
As few as five workers would arrive, while three blocks away in the Dunkin'
Donuts and Long Island Rail Road parking lots, a throng of 100 or more men,
mainly Latin American immigrants, would wait for landscaping and construction
contractors to come by and offer them daily jobs.
Today, the roles are reversed: Cortes' site is attracting the bulk of day laborers
in Freeport, while the Dunkin' Donuts location is nearly deserted.
The three groups running the site - Catholic Charities, The Workplace Project of
Hempstead and the Village of Freeport - are calling it a success that may serve
as a model for other communities wrestling with one of the most contentious
issues on Long Island.
"We've turned the corner," Cortes, a Nicaraguan immigrant who holds an MBA
from Adelphi University, said one morning last week as about 40 men waited for
work at the site, in a municipal parking lot on Bennington Avenue in a
semi-industrial zone.
As the Freeport center nears its one-year anniversary, immigration advocates
are launching a renewed effort to set up more day labor hiring sites on Long
Island. They've created a fund that already has $130,000 and is expected to
grow to $250,000 shortly. They say they are taking the initiative because
governments across Long Island have failed to do so.
"We've stepped forward because nobody else was," said Darren Sandow,
program officer for the newly created Work Long Island Fund. "From the Nassau
border all the way out to Montauk, you've got a growing population of day
laborers."
Long Island is home to an estimated 1,000 to 2,000 day laborers. The majority
wait on street corners in communities including
Franklin Square, Inwood, Westbury,
Farmingville and Southampton,
where they crowd around the vehicles of contractors who pull up. But
Freeport, Glen Cove, and
Huntington Station
have created formal hiring sites.
Proponents say the centers resolve traffic safety problems and get the men off
dangerously busy street corners and onto organized sites where they also can
study English, computers and other subjects. Opponents say the locations often
fail to attract many workers and aid illegal activity because some workers are
undocumented immigrants who don't pay income taxes.
The issue has provoked heated debate. A proposed hiring site in
Farmingville was shot down in 2001,
while one that opened in Farmingdale
last August closed about a month later after some community opposition.
Although immigrant advocates and Mayor William F. Glacken are claiming victory
with the new site in Freeport, not everyone supports the idea. "There is no way
that anyone on the face of the Earth can convince me that what's going on there
is legitimate," said local resident Georgia Prunty. She added, "I'd rather be a
dead patriot than a live coward, because we're losing our country."
Cortes, who is employed by Catholic Charities immigrant services, said the
center's turnaround began in early May, when Freeport police intensified efforts
to direct contractors to it. The workers soon followed.
At 6:30 a.m. sharp each day, the men draw numbers to determine who will get
the first jobs that come in. Usually at least half of the 40 or so who show up get
work, Cortes said.
While waiting, they play soccer on the paved parking lot, take English classes
and surf the Internet on one of five computers inside a trailer that has running
water, a bathroom and a television.
"From the first day I came, this has been a good thing," Francisco Machado, 34, a
native of El Salvador, said in Spanish.
Still, not all of Freeport's day laborers are using the location. On Tuesday at 7:15
a.m., a dozen workers were gathered at the Dunkin' Donuts location. A handful
also waited for work at a couple other spots.
Cortes said he hopes to lure all the workers to the new site. "We've finally
arrived," he said. "This is the true deal."
http://www.newsday.com/news/printedition/longisland/ny-lisite263358324jul04,0,4778521.story?coll=ny-linews-archive
Posted by dc at 10:33 PM | Comments (0)
July 02, 2003
Americana at Manhasset
Americana at Manhasset (nice mall) explained.
The center’s customer has an average household income of $155,000,
and a median home value of $1.25 million.
The center is located along a 1,469-foot stretch at 2110
Northern Boulevard, by the intersection of Searingtown
Road in monied Manhasset. Shoppers come primarily from
several other wealthy Long Island towns, such as Great Neck,
Sands Point, Roslyn, Brookville and Locust Valley, though
the Americana Manhasset draws as far west as Manhattan,
east to Oyster Bay in Nassau County, and north to south, from
the Long Island Sound to Garden City.
Posted by dc at 09:56 PM | Comments (1)
July 01, 2003
Newsday Real Estate Maps
Posted by dc at 12:38 AM | Comments (0)

