A parade of boats kicks off the 2015 Village Cup Regatta in Port Jefferson. Photo by Bob Savage
Brian Haensly, of the Saffron United Pipe Band from Babylon, provides musical support during the 2015 Village Cup Regatta in Port Jefferson. Photo by Bob Savage
A boat sails past an American flag in the harbor at the 2015 Village Cup Regatta in Port Jefferson. Photo by Bob Savage
A fireboat adds a salute to the parade of boats at the 2015 Village Cup Regatta in Port Jefferson. Photo by Bob Savage
Port Jefferson resident Megan Becherer, 4, gets her face painted during the 2015 Village Cup Regatta in Port Jefferson. Photo by Bob Savage
Sailors wave to the crowd at the 2015 Village Cup Regatta in Port Jefferson. Photo by Bob Savage
Children play games at the harborfront park during the 2015 Village Cup Regatta in Port Jefferson. Photo by Bob Savage
Sailboats pass by during a parade of boats at the 2015 Village Cup Regatta in Port Jefferson. Photo by Bob Savage
Sailboats glide by during a parade of boats at the 2015 Village Cup Regatta in Port Jefferson. Photo by Bob Savage
A girl plays a game at the harborfront park during the 2015 Village Cup Regatta in Port Jefferson. Photo by Bob Savage
CBS news anchor Maurice DuBois watches boats from the shore at the 2015 Village Cup Regatta in Port Jefferson. Photo by Bob Savage
Sailboats are lined up during a parade of boats ahead of the 2015 Village Cup Regatta in Port Jefferson. Photo by Bob Savage
Stony Brook resident Emily Huang paints at the harborfront park during the 2015 Village Cup Regatta in Port Jefferson. Photo by Bob Savage
Spectators watch sailboats from the dock during the 2015 Village Cup Regatta in Port Jefferson. Photo by Bob Savage
Jessica Colon, an 8-year-old Port Jefferson Station resident, gets her face painted at the harborfront park during the 2015 Village Cup Regatta in Port Jefferson. Photo by Bob Savage
Isabella Colon, and 8-year-old Port Jefferson Station resident, gets her face painted during the 2015 Village Cup Regatta in Port Jefferson. Photo by Bob Savage
Actor Ralph Macchio hoists the trophy after the 2015 Village Cup Regatta in Port Jefferson. Photo by Bob Savage
Victorious sailors pose with the trophy after the 2015 Village Cup Regatta in Port Jefferson. Photo by Bob Savage
Actor Ralph Macchio speaks during an award ceremony at the Village Center following the 2015 Village Cup Regatta in Port Jefferson. Photo by Bob Savage
"Andaluz the Artist" poses next to his painting on display at the Village Center after the 2015 Village Cup Regatta in Port Jefferson. After painting it live during the reception, Andaluz donated the painting, which was then auctioned. Photo by Bob Savage
Port Jefferson Yacht Club hosted its sixth annual Village Cup Regatta on Saturday, raising funds for pancreatic cancer research through the Lustgarten Foundation and for John T. Mather Memorial Hospital’s palliative medicine program.
The regatta pits the hospital and Port Jefferson Village against one another in a friendly competition for the Village Cup, a trophy which the hospital has now won two years in a row following a village reign of three years.
Participants raised about $64,000 for the cause through this year’s race, according to yacht club member Chuck Chiaramonte. The sum will be split between the Lustgarten Foundation and the palliative care program, which is focused on improving patients’ quality of life.
Chiaramonte said over the six years of the regatta, the event has raised more than $300,000.
The yacht club — formerly known as the Setauket Yacht Club — supplied the boats and captains for the event, which included a parade of boats, games and face painting for children at the harborfront park, and a trophy presentation at the adjacent Village Center.
Chiaramonte said the club looks forward to the event every year.
“It was really meant to just be a joyous occasion and share the love of the water and boating with our neighbors,” he said.
Move is part of Stern’s Housing our Homeless Heroes initiative
Suffolk County seeks to help house veterans. File photo
Suffolk County seeks to help house veterans. File photo
Suffolk County lawmakers have taken another step toward putting roofs over homeless veterans’ heads.
On Sept. 9, the Suffolk County Legislature unanimously approved the transfer of eight tax-defaulted properties to nonprofit agencies that will in turn convert them into affordable rental housing for veterans who are homeless or seriously at risk of becoming homeless.
The move is a significant component of Legislator Steve Stern’s (D) Housing our Homeless Heroes initiative, a multi-pronged legislative package aimed at battling the war against veteran homelessness in Suffolk. Officials have said there are about 750 Long Island veterans who are either homeless or who are expected to be homeless by the end of 2015.
Stern, who is the chairman of the county’s Veterans and Seniors Committee, said the law is a worthy initiative and way to truly give back to those who have served.
“I’ve always said that we all need to do our part in serving those that have served us,” Stern said in a phone interview Friday. “But it can’t just be marching a parade. It can’t just be waving a flag.”
The nonprofits involved would foot the construction bill through possibly more than $10 million in state and federal grant funding available for such projects, Stern said. Funding for the construction will be provided in part from the New York State Homeless Housing Assistance Program and United States Department of Housing and Urban Development HOME Investment Partnerships Program.
A total of 14 units of housing would be created among the eight properties that have been transferred, Stern said.
Two parcels in Central Islip will be transferred to the Concern for Independent Living for the construction of three single-family homes. Bay Shore-based United Veterans Beacon House has proposed to rehabilitate an existing home on a Copiague parcel, and build a single-family unit on a Yaphank parcel.
In addition, the Association for Mental Health and Wellness is proposing to build a new four-bedroom house for three senior disabled veterans and a live-in house manager on two parcels in Mastic; rehabilitate a house in Riverhead for one veteran family; and build a new set of four, single room occupancies for veterans on a parcel in Medford.
“As an agency committed to ensuring empowering people to overcome the impact of health and mental health disabilities, it is our intent to devote these houses to assist male and female veterans who have been affected by service-connected and post-service transition mental health challenges,” said Michael Stoltz, Chief Executive Officer of the Association for Mental Health and Wellness said in a previous statement. “I thank Suffolk County for partnering with our organization to further assist us in supporting our veterans.”
Stern’s hoping the first unit to be completed — the Copiague parcel — will be built within a year. “The timing is going to be very varied depending on the particular locations,” he said.
Housing our Homeless Heroes doesn’t stop at just housing. At the same meeting, the Legislature approved Helping Our Veterans lane (HOV lane) legislation, sponsored by Legislator Tom Cilmi (R-East Islip) and Stern. The legislation’s goal is to expedite veteran services within the county’s Department of Social Services.
Stern said many times, veterans walk into the county’s DSS for services they may typically need from the U.S. Department of Veterans Affairs, and they are “turned away.” He said it becomes challenge to get them to come back to a government assistance office. The HOV lane legislation would make it so that veterans who are seeking services at DSS would get paired with a veteran services officer. Their requests would be fast-tracked when the walk into the department — regardless of whether they’re at the right office.
“That’s very important here because veterans, too many of them, face too many challenges and time becomes very important,”
Stern said.
Stern said he’s proud of the enactment of Housing our Homeless Heroes.
“I have every reason to believe that it’s going to serve as model for the rest of the country,” he said.
Huntington members of the Working Families Party have spoken.
Keith Barrett is the town’s deputy director of general services. Photo from Barrett
Huntington Town Councilwoman Susan Berland (D) and Democrat Keith Barrett swept a Working Families Party primary election on Sept. 10, earning the line in a race for the Huntington Town Board in November.
Barrett came in first place, receiving about 47 percent, or 205 votes, and Berland garnered nearly 31 percent of the votes, or 133 votes.
The two trumped contenders Charles Marino, who got about 21 percent, or 91 votes, and husband-wife duo Richard Hall and Valerie Stingfellow, who combined got fewer than 10 votes, though the two declared they were no longer actively campaigning and urged their supporters to throw their votes behind Marino.
The primary election upholds the Working Families Party endorsements of Barrett and Berland. Emily Abbott, the party’s Long Island political director, said in a previous email that Berland and Barrett both “share our values and support our key legislative issues like raising the minimum wage and passing paid family leave.”
When reached on Friday, Berland said she was happy with the results.
Susan Berland is seeking reelection to the Huntington Town Board. Photo by Rohma Abbas
“It feels very gratifying,” Berland said in a phone interview. “My record proves I’ve always supported the Working Families Party and I will continue to do so.”
The councilwoman said she has received the party’s support every time she ran for office since her second campaign.
Barrett didn’t immediately return a call seeking comment on Friday, but the Huntington resident said in a previous interview, “I come from a working family. I’m a union guy, a blue-collar worker. I’ve always been in the working guys shoes.”
Marino, Hall and Stringfellow did not immediately return requests seeking comment.
Smithtown Councilman Bob Creighton. File photo by Rachel Shapiro
Thursday’s Republican primary in Smithtown saw an incumbent fall to the bottom of the pack in the town board race, but only by a slim margin.
Councilman Bob Creighton (R) came in third out of three candidates seeking the Republican line in November’s general election. The other two, incumbent Councilman Ed Wehrheim (R) and challenger Lisa M. Inzerillo came in first and second, respectively, all but assuring them Republican spots, according to unofficial Suffolk County Board of Elections results.
By Friday morning, Wehrheim had collected 40.49 percent of the vote — 1,673 total votes — and Inzerillo earned 31.27 percent, or 1,292 total votes. Creighton came in close behind Inzerillo with 27.81 percent — 1,149 votes.
Creighton had focused much of his primary bid on development in Smithtown that he said could attract new business to the community. He has served on the Smithtown Town Board since 2008 and has been a longtime ally of Wehrheim, often aligning with him in critical votes put before the board over recent years.
“There are still some 200-odd absentee ballots to count, but I have no illusions about that,” Creighton said. “I lost — period.”
Creighton said he attributed part of the loss to low voter turnout, with just about seven percent of Smithtown Republicans hitting the polls. The councilman also said he had full intentions of still running on the Independent, Conservative and Reform party lines come November, whether or not absentee ballots salvage his primary bid later next week.
Wehrheim has been on the board since 2003 and said in a previous interview that he would like to use another term to work on funding more projects to revitalize Smithtown’s downtown area. In a phone interview, the councilman said torrential downpours throughout the voting hours on Thursday may have had an impact on voter turnout, which was slightly lower than the average primary.
“I am very pleased with my position as number-one in the race, but I do believe the weather certainly had an affect on the voter turnout,” he said. “The board, as of late, is fairly divided, but I have a long tenure with the town and I will continue to do what I’ve always done. I will go in there, and work on behalf of the Smithtown resident.”
Inzerillo, a business owner from Kings Park, focused her campaign on making Smithtown’s downtown business district more vibrant. She declared victory following Thursday’s vote in a statement, looking forward to discussing the town’s most pressing issues.
“This grassroots campaign, fueled by family and friends, has inspired and humbled me and I am ready to represent the Republican Party in November,” she said.
Both Creighton’s and Wehrheim’s seats on the board will be up for a vote come November, with the incumbents facing off against Inzerillo and Democrat Larry Vetter, who announced his candidacy earlier this year. The winners will join incumbents not up for re-election, Supervisor Pat Vecchio, Councilman Tom McCarthy and Councilwoman Lynne Nowick — all Republicans.
Editor’s note: This story was updated to include comments from Councilman Bob Creighton and Councilman Ed Wehrheim.
Suffolk County Executive Steve Bellone makes his way down the marathon route in a previous running event held in the county. Photo from Bellone’s office
By Steve Bellone
Suffolk County is home to more than 90,000 veterans, the largest population of veterans in any county in New York State. They have selflessly served their country, in war and in times of peace, making sacrifices to ensure our safety and protect our way of life.
Suffolk County Executive Steve Bellone makes his way down the marathon route in a previous running event held in the county. Photo from Bellone’s office
We all have a duty to make sure that veterans are not overlooked when they return to civilian life. Too often, veterans return home from service in need of our assistance and recognition for a job well done.
I am proud that the Suffolk County Veterans Service Agency and our many local veterans organizations work tirelessly to meet the needs of veterans who are struggling with post-traumatic stress disorder, lack of quality housing and job assistance. No veteran should have to fight another battle to receive needed services and adjust to civilian life.
The fact is, there is so much more we need to do to support our veterans. That is why I helped organize the first ever Suffolk County Marathon and Half Marathon to Support Our Veterans.
This event will kick off from Heckscher State Park, this Sunday, Sept. 13 and travel through many of our amazing downtowns. Every dollar that we net from this marathon will help fund services which will benefit our Suffolk County veterans community.
As a veteran myself, I will be participating in the event as one of the thousands running it. But, there are so many ways to be involved.
You can join in this effort to support veterans by running, volunteering or cheering on others who are participating in this great cause. In addition to the race, The Taste of Long Island festival will show off locally produced wine, food and drinks, with entertainment provided by bands made up of veterans. Among the thousands of runners are many veterans and active-duty members of the services.
I encourage you to go to www.suffolkmarathon.com to learn more about how you can be part of history and honoring our great veterans community. I look forward to seeing you out there.
Community members gathered to commemorate the 14th anniversary of the September 11 terrorist attack on the United States. During memorial events across Suffolk County, ceremonial shots were fired, victims’ names read aloud and flowers laid down.
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An official plays the bugle at Port Jefferson Fire Department's 13th annual 9/11 memorial ceremony. Photo by Giselle Barkley
Local police officers salute in memory of those who died in the towers on Sept. 11, 2001, at Port Jefferson Fire Department's 13th annual 9/11 memorial ceremony. Photo by Giselle Barkley
Marines volley shots at the end of Port Jefferson Fire Department's 13th annual 9/11 memorial ceremony. Photo by Giselle Barkley
Firefighters remove their caps during a moment of silence at Port Jefferson Fire Department's 13th annual 9/11 memorial ceremony. Photo by Giselle Barkley
A bagpiper performs at Port Jefferson Fire Department's 13th annual 9/11 memorial ceremony. Photo by Giselle Barkley
A firefighter reads the names of Brookhaven first responders who died in the towers on Sept. 11, 2001 at Port Jefferson Fire Department's 13th annual 9/11 memorial ceremony. Photo by Giselle Barkley
A firefighter hits the bell after the names of Brookhaven first responders are read at Port Jefferson Fire Department's 13th annual 9/11 memorial ceremony. Photo by Giselle Barkley
Kids sing "I'm proud to be an American" and other songs at Port Jefferson Fire Department's 13th annual 9/11 memorial ceremony. Photo by Giselle Barkley
Marines stand in attention at Port Jefferson Fire Department's 13th annual 9/11 memorial ceremony. Photo by Giselle Barkley
Roses are offered in honor of each of Huntington Town's 43 victims who died during the Sept. 11, 2001 attacks on the World Trade Center. Photo by Rohma Abbas
Many turned out to pay respects at Huntington Town's annual 9/11 memorial service, held at Heckscher Park in Huntington. Photo by Rohma Abbas
Friends and families of victims who perished in the Sept. 11, 2001 attacks on the World Trade Center attend a 9/11 memorial service held at Heckscher Park
Huntington Town's elected officials and the audience participate in the Pledge of Allegiance at the town's annual 9/11 memorial service at Heckscher Park in Huntington. Photo by Rohma Abbaas
Roses at a 9/11 memorial service hosted by Huntington Town at Heckscher Park. Photo by Rohma Abbas
Veterans turn out to pay respects at Huntington Town's annual 9/11 memorial service, held at Heckscher Park in Huntington. Photo by Rohma Abbas
A memorial is on display at the East Northport Fire Department. Photo by Victoria Espinoza
Chief Wayne Kaifler Jr. speaks during the East Northport Fire Department’s 9/11 memorial service on Friday, Sept. 11, 2015. Photo by Victoria Espinoza
The Northport High School Tights sing during East Northport Fire Department’s annual 9/11 memorial service on Friday, Sept. 11, 2015. Photo by Victoria Espinoza
Doves are released during East Northport Fire Department’s annual 9/11 memorial service on Friday, Sept. 11, 2015. Photo by Victoria Espinoza
Members of the East Northport Fire Department read the names of the victims during the annual 9/11 memorial service on Friday, Sept. 11, 2015. Photo by Victoria Espinoza
Members of the East Northport Fire Department participate in the annual 9/11 memorial service on Friday, Sept. 11, 2015. Photo by Victoria Espinoza
Members of the East Northport Fire Department participate in the annual 9/11 memorial service on Friday, Sept. 11, 2015. Photo by Victoria Espinoza
On Sept. 11, the North Tap bar hosted a charity event celebrating first responders. Photo by Eric Santiago
The North Tap's owner, Marissa Montanino, organized a charity event on Sept. 11 to celebrate first responders. Photo by Eric Santiago
Emergency medical technicians Bryan Monahan and Jamie Santiago attended the North Tap's charity event on Sept. 11, which honored first responders. Photo by Eric Santiago
Firefighters file into the 9/11 memorial site next to the Shoreham Firehouse at Rocky Point Fire Department’s 9/11 Memorial Service. Photo by Giselle Barkley
David Singer, chairman of the Rocky Point Fire Department, speaks at Rocky Point Fire Department’s 9/11 memorial service. Photo by Giselle Barkley
A man touches the wall to pay respect to someone he lost on Sept. 11, 2001 at Rocky Point Fire Department’s 9/11 memorial service. Photo by Giselle Barkley
Chairman of the Rocky Point Fire Department, David Singer, stands in front the memorial wall after firefighters exit the memorial site at Rocky Point Fire Department’s 9/11 memorial service. Photo by Giselle Barkley
Scenes from Friday's Sept. 11 memorial ceremony at the East Setauket Fire Department. Photo by Greg Catalano
Scenes from Friday's Sept. 11 memorial ceremony at the East Setauket Fire Department. Photo by Greg Catalano
Scenes from Friday's Sept. 11 memorial ceremony at the East Setauket Fire Department. Photo by Greg Catalano
The 9/11 Responders Remembered Park in Nesconset hosts a reading of the names ceremony on Sept 12. Photo from John Feal
The 9/11 Responders Remembered Park in Nesconset hosts a reading of the names ceremony on Sept 12. Photo from John Feal
The 9/11 Responders Remembered Park in Nesconset hosts a reading of the names ceremony on Sept 12. Photo from John Feal
Jimmy Puckey and Kevin Cutinella carry Tom Cutinella’s jersey onto the Stony Brook University field for the Long Island Championship game. File photo by Bill Landon
By Clayton Collier
Following a 2014 season that began in tragedy and ended with the program’s first Long Island Championship, the Shoreham-Wading River football program returns to the field well-prepared to contend for another title.
The Wildcats persevered to complete a perfect 12-0 season while coping with the loss of teammate Tom Cutinella, who died following a collision during a game at John Glenn High School on Oct. 1.
“It is an incredible story, but one I’d never want to live through again,” Shoreham-Wading River head coach Matt Millheiser said. “In the end, we lost Tom, and although the season ended miraculously and kind of storybook, it’s something we wish we didn’t have to go through.”
Millheiser said it was difficult for everyone following the loss of Cutinella, but from a coaching perspective, it was particularly hard to handle.
A sign with Tom Cutinella’s jersey number sits above the press box above the soon-to-be old Wildcats athletic field. File photo by Bill Landon
“It’s not something that you can even find anybody to ask advice on how to handle that as a coach or as a person or a friend,” he said. “So we kind of did our best to be there for each other and get through it.”
To keep his memory alive, Shoreham-Wading River will name its new multipurpose athletic field after Cutinella. While construction takes place, the Wildcats will play home games at Rocky Point High School. Millheiser said he wants future Shoreham-Wading River athletes to know who Cutinella was.
“He lived his life in a certain way that we want our players and our team to live up to that and remember that always,” he said. “And naming the field after him is a constant reminder of how we want to do things and how we want to act. His name and his legacy will carry on.”
The Wildcats picked up right where they left off last year in their season opener Friday night in Riverhead against McGann-Mercy, besting the Monarchs in a 35-0 rout. Cutinella’s brother, Kevin, scored a touchdown in the first quarter.
“They play with a lot of enthusiasm and our kids matched that and were able to make some big plays early then stay in the lead,” Millheiser said. “It was a good game between two good teams, and fortunately we made a few more plays than they did.”
Millheiser said his team’s hard play was a positive but would like to see some improvement on blocking.
The game was also the first test for new quarterback Jason Curran, who replaces All-County quarterback Danny Hughes. Though Hughes was a special player, according to Millheiser, he has the utmost confidence in Curran’s abilities.
“I think he has the ability to do the things that Danny did, but he’s gaining experience,” he said. “He’s still going to have to learn the football side of it. You don’t just walk into a huddle and have the kids follow you. You got to kind of earn that from them. There’s no doubt in my mind that he will, but it’s going to take a little bit of time.”
Above, the Northport Historical Society. Photo from Heather Johnson
By Eric Santiago
Over the last year, a group of Northport-East Northport teachers and students have worked to preserve an overlooked piece of Long Island’s history.
Eaton’s Neck was home to a leading patriot, forgotten except by a few local history buffs. Yet the biography of John Sloss Hobart (1738-1805) reads like the résumé of a Revolutionary War hero. Born in Connecticut, Hobart went on to graduate from Yale University, join the American resistance, help draft the New York State Constitution, briefly becoming a U.S. senator and eventually accepting a federal judgeship.
Unlike Revolutionary War-era icons like Nathan Hale or Paul Revere, Hobart’s name largely faded into obscurity.
“For some reason his name didn’t stand out the way theirs did,” Peter White, a retired social studies teacher who taught at Northport Middle School, said.
But there are pieces of Hobart’s legacy that survive. After his death in 1805, a close friend of Hobart’s, the judge Egbert Benson, commissioned a marble tablet in Hobart’s honor.
Bearing an inscription that praised his work in life, the Hobart tablet spent about the next 150 years in the basement of New York City Hall, according to a letter White co-wrote to the Northport-East Northport school board. This was until Richard Streb, a teacher at Northport High School, discovered the tablet in 1963. He convinced then-Mayor Robert Wagner’s administration to sell the tablet to the Northport-East Northport school district for $1.
A view of the tablet honoring John Sloss Hobart. Photo from Kathleen Cusumano
It’s bounced around Northport-East Northport schools ever since, most recently embedded in the wall of the auditorium at Northport Middle School. When Streb retired in 1981, he asked White, his close friend and protégé, to look after the tablet.
It gathered dust in the back of the auditorium until last December when music department chairperson, Izzet Mergen, considered dedicating the space to former music department chairperson, Robert Krueger.
Realizing that moving the tablet would be a sensitive issue, Mergen contacted White, who then contacted Kathleen Cusumano, a permanent substitute teacher at Northport Middle School. A former student of White’s and a local history expert, Cusumano and the others formed a group to decide the tablet’s fate. The goal was to find somewhere the tablet could be seen and appreciated.
“We had the task of trying to figure out what to do with it,” White said.
Sensing this could be a valuable learning experience, Cusumano started recruiting students to help with the search.
“We have middle school students who are living on Hobart land,” Cusumano said. “There’s always that connection when you’re trying to teach history — that tangible connection of actually seeing something that really existed and didn’t just come out of a textbook.”
Now with a dozen students in tow, the group began exploring possible homes for the tablet. Several places were considered, with the Northport Historical Society, Northport Library and Huntington Town Hall as some of the most popular contenders. The students visited these locations before voting on where they would recommend the tablet be placed. Ultimately the school district, which owns the tablet, had the final say.
Heather Johnson, the director of the historical society, remembers when the students visited. She was particularly impressed with their thoughtful questions.
“For somebody who works in a historical society, we’re always trying get people involved of all ages interested in history,” she said. “There’s nothing more heartwarming and positive to see — really any group — but certainly a young group who are trying to make a difference.”
After the visit, the students started to lean toward the historical society, but they were reluctant to declare a permanent home for the tablet, Cusumano said. What if no one came to the historical society? Could they guarantee that some place like the library wouldn’t guarantee more visibility?
But the students managed to come up with a compromise, according to Cusumano; they decided to ask that the tablet only be loaned for a year. If the historical society turned out to be a poor fit, the tablet could be moved elsewhere at the end of the year.
The school board approved this recommendation at a recent meeting. According to district clerk, Beth Nystrom, the tablet will be moved to the historical society once the attorneys from both parties draft the formal agreement to loan the tablet.
For their part, Johnson said the historical society was proud and excited to add the tablet to their collection.
“When we found out we were the top choice, we were delighted and honored,” she said. “[The students] did their research, and that made it even more meaningful to be chosen.”
Cusumano also praised the students’ dedication. She stressed that some of the best learning can only be done outside of the classroom.
“I think when you experience — when you have experiential learning — it stays with you,” she said. “More things like field trips where [the students] can get involved, I believe, makes for a lifelong learner.”
South Setauket resident Jay Gardiner says he hopes his background in business can help him lead the Setauket Fire District into another five years of excellence. Photo by Phil Corso
When it comes to his commitment to the Setauket Fire District, newly appointed Commissioner Jay Gardiner is all business.
Gardiner, of South Setauket, was appointed to his job with the district back in May to fill the remainder of the term previously held by Thomas Gallagher and said he has stepped up in his efforts to share his name and face with the greater Setauket community as he heads into a re-election bid later this year. Since being named commissioner, he said he has been calling on his more than two decades working with the fire department, including 12 years as a lieutenant, to ensure the district maintains what he describes as a first-class service with a firm financial foundation.
“I want to see this project through,” Gardiner said, citing ongoing projects to upgrade the Setauket Fire Department grounds among other things in the works within the district. “I can lend my business acumen to my community over the five-year term.”
The roughly 28-square-mile Setauket Fire District has spent the better part of the past year discussing ways to improve and upgrade the Setauket Fire Department, and there have been rough renderings circulating throughout the district mulling over ways to do that. Gardiner said he was anticipating construction at the Main Street firehouse to hopefully begin over the next year and be finished by 2018.
“We need the ability to get the right trucks and new equipment in an efficient way,” he said. “I believe I can be an objective eye throughout the process.”
Gardiner was appointed after the Setauket Fire District’s five-member board interviewed three qualified candidates earlier this year to replace the retiring Gallagher. In a statement posted on the Setauket Fire District’s Facebook page, Gardiner was selected based on his strong background in business, emergency response services leadership and education, as well as his many dedicated years of service, having served with the department since 1989. He has also served as president of Gardiner Plastics, an active leader in the plastics industry.
“The business goal is to see continuous quality improvement,” he said. “The fire department gets every tool it needs, and there are new advancements every day. That’s where being able to budget properly comes in. These are the things that will make a difference in the community.”
Since taking on the position in May, Gardiner said the Setauket Fire District’s ability to respond to emergencies has increased over recent months, thanks to the maintenance and upgrading of state-of-the-art equipment and a neighbors-first mentality.
“We believe in community,” he said. “We are part of the community, and the people we are serving are our neighbors and our friends.”
One of his biggest priorities since assuming the commissioner role, Gardiner said, has been working to make sure the greater North Shore community learns more about the quality of services available through the Setauket Fire District. He said he wants the nearly 150-member fire department’s services and practices to be both easily understandable and interactive with the community.
“We’re working on new policies to make the department even more professional,” he said. “We want to look and act like the first-rate service we are.”
Suffolk County police say they arrested two gang members after searching a Huntington home on Thursday and uncovering drugs and loaded weapons.
Police executed a search warrant at the home, on Cedar Drive in Huntington, and investigators seized a loaded .40 caliber Smith and Wesson semiautomatic handgun, cocaine, marijuana, cash, digital scales and an assortment of drug packaging equipment, cops said in a statement. The drugs had a street value of more than $3,000.
Wesley Erickson, 31, a resident of the home, was charged with second-degree criminal possession of a weapon, two counts of third-degree criminal sale of a controlled substance, two counts of third-degree criminal possession of a controlled substance, two counts of second-degree criminal use of drug paraphernalia and unlawful possession of marijuana.
Andre Knox. Photo from SCPD
Andre Knox, 37, of Huntington Station, was charged with third-degree criminal sale of a controlled substance.
Erickson and Knox, who police said are both members of the Old Station Soldiers gang, were held overnight at the 2nd Precinct and are scheduled for arraignment at First District Court in Central Islip on Sept. 11.
The police units involved included Narcotics Section detectives, 2nd Precinct Special Operations Team detectives, Criminal Intelligence Bureau detectives, and officers from the 2nd Precinct Gang Unit, Emergency Service Section and Canine Section. In a statement, Cops said the execution of the search warrant was “part of the Suffolk County Police Department’s continuing enforcement efforts in the Town of Huntington.”
Attorney information for the pair was not available on Friday morning.