Students celebrated with friends and family upon graduation. Photo by Kyle Barr
Caps flew in the air after the commencement ceremony. Photo by Kyle Barr
Speaker Tara Higgins speaks at graduation.
Students receive their diplomas. Photo by Kyle Barr
Salutatorian Ava Schully speaks to graduating class. Photo by Kyle Barr
Port Jeff's commencement ceremony was held June 28. Photo by Kyle Barr
Graduating Senior Reid Biondo speaks at graduation. Photo by Kyle Barr
Port Jeff's commencement ceremony was held June 28. Photo by Kyle Barr
Students celebrated with friends and family upon graduation. Photo by Kyle Barr
Students celebrated with friends and family upon graduation. Photo by Kyle Barr
Students celebrated with friends and family upon graduation. Photo by Kyle Barr
Students celebrated with friends and family upon graduation. Photo by Kyle Barr
Students celebrated with friends and family upon graduation. Photo by Kyle Barr
Students receive their diplomas. Photo by Kyle Barr
Students celebrated with friends and family upon graduation. Photo by Kyle Barr
Caps flew in the air after the commencement ceremony. Photo by Kyle Barr
Students receive their diplomas. Photo by Kyle Barr
The Berger family receives an honorary diploma in honor of their son Dylan, who died in 2016. Photo by Kyle Barr
Students receive their diplomas. Photo by Kyle Barr
Students receive their diplomas. Photo by Kyle Barr
Students receive their diplomas. Photo by Kyle Barr
Students receive their diplomas. Photo by Kyle Barr
Students receive their diplomas. Photo by Kyle Barr
Students receive their diplomas. Photo by Kyle Barr
Students receive their diplomas. Photo by Kyle Barr
Students receive their diplomas. Photo by Kyle Barr
Students receive their diplomas. Photo by Kyle Barr
Students receive their diplomas. Photo by Kyle Barr
Students receive their diplomas. Photo by Kyle Barr
Students receive their diplomas. Photo by Kyle Barr
Students receive their diplomas. Photo by Kyle Barr
Students receive their diplomas. Photo by Kyle Barr
Students receive their diplomas. Photo by Kyle Barr
Valedictorian Annalisa Welinder speaks to the graduating class. Photo by Kyle Barr
Superintendent Paul Casciano speaks during graduation. Photo by Kyle Barr
Superintendent Paul Casciano speaks during graduation. Photo by Kyle Barr
In Port Jefferson, graduates shared in the late June celebrations, braving the heat and humidity June 28 to grab their diplomas.
As the outgoing superintendent, Casciano thanked his colleagues as he prepared to leave the district in October in order to aid the new superintendent Jessica Schmettan.
“The class of 2019 will really be missed,” he said. “Everything you have done has been a demonstration of commitment and the pursuit of excellence.”
In addition, the Berger family received an honorary diploma in honor of their son Dylan, who died in 2016.
Reid Biondo, the Student Organization president, who will soon be attending the University of Virginia for economics and science, told his fellow graduating seniors they would need to look to themselves and their values as they move away from school.
“I don’t need to tell everyone the values they already know, I only ask that in the upcoming years they uphold their values with dedication and action,” he said. “Everyone can talk, but few will act.”
Comsewogue ended its graduation ceremony with a fireworks display. Photo by Kyle Barr
Superintendent Joe Rella and Board President John Swenning embrace. Photo by Kyle Barr
A graduate looks at a Pokemon card, placed by the Nielsens underneath all graduates chairs as a reminder that everyone can evolve. By Kyle Barr
Board Vice President Alexandra Gordon. Photo by Kyle Barr
The high school auditorium is renamed after outgoing Comsewogue Superintendent Joe Rella. Photo by Kyle Barr
Comsewogue ended its graduation ceremony with a fireworks display. Photo by Kyle Barr
Steven and Jean Nielsen accept a diploma in honor of their son, James, who died in 2018 from an aggressive form of cancer. Photo by Kyle Barr
Superintendent Joe Rella a his last graduation ceremony, 2019. Photo by Kyle Barr
Students accept their diplomas June 26. Photo by Kyle Barr
Students accept their diplomas June 26. Photo by Kyle Barr
Students accept their diplomas June 26. Photo by Kyle Barr
Students accept their diplomas June 26. Photo by Kyle Barr
Students accept their diplomas June 26. Photo by Kyle Barr
Students accept their diplomas June 26. Photo by Kyle Barr
Students accept their diplomas June 26. Photo by Kyle Barr
Students accept their diplomas June 26. Photo by Kyle Barr
Students accept their diplomas June 26. Photo by Kyle Barr
Students accept their diplomas June 26. Photo by Kyle Barr
Students accept their diplomas June 26. Photo by Kyle Barr
Students accept their diplomas June 26. Photo by Kyle Barr
Students accept their diplomas June 26. Photo by Kyle Barr
Students accept their diplomas June 26. Photo by Kyle Barr
Students accept their diplomas June 26. Photo by Kyle Barr
crowd members hold up signs of a graduating senior.
Students accept their diplomas June 26. Photo by Kyle Barr
Students accept their diplomas June 26. Photo by Kyle Barr
Students accept their diplomas June 26. Photo by Kyle Barr
Students accept their diplomas June 26. Photo by Kyle Barr
Valedictorian Ankita Katukota gives her address. Photo by Kyle Barr
Senior Sophia Azzara gives an address. Photo by Kyle Barr
Senior Class President Jason Friia speaks. Photo by Kyle Barr
Crowd members hold up signs of a graduating senior. Photo by Kyle Barr
Salutatorian Jessica Sperling speaks. Photo by Kyle Barr
There was much finality to this year’s school graduations at Comsewogue school district. As high school seniors got ready to leave for new horizons, superintendents Joe Rella will soon be leaving his position.
At Comsewogue High School, as the evening sun crept toward the horizon June 26
, blocking in the football field with the cooling shade of trees, as the students were graduating so was Rella, or at least that is how he said he saw it.
Rella was in for his own surprise, as he was brought on stage alongside incoming superintendent Jennifer Quinn and members of the school board. In front of the stage, graduates held up a sign reading Dr. Joseph V. Rella Performing Arts Center. Quinn announced the high school auditorium would now be sporting Rella’s name.
“Clearly you’re a lot smarter than I am. It took you four years to graduate high school, it took me almost 26,” Rella said, speaking to the students with a 2019 tassel on his hat. “Remember, wherever you go and whatever you do, you will always be one of us.”
Steven Nielsen, who lost his 17-year-old son James from a rare form of cancer a little less than a year ago, spoke to the graduating class about his son and what values he could share even after his untimely death.
“I think James is a good inspiration of how to live,” he said. “He was an amazing person, he was smart, he was handsome, he was extremely kind and unbelievably empathetic. Remember that, be kind, use that as an example. Think of other people in everything that you do.”
Underneath each of the graduates’ chairs, stuck into the rough metal seats, was a Pokémon card. These, Nielsen said, were there to represent each of them had the opportunity to “evolve.”
He and his wife Jean, both teachers in the Comsewogue School District, accepted a diploma in honor of their son, with Steven Nielsen holding the cap and gown his son would have worn to graduation.
To cap off Comsewogue’s graduation ceremony, as the scenery got dark, fireworks rose above the trees of a distant field, and all the newly graduated students stared up at the sky. Unknown to high school principal Joe Coniglione, the field lights would take several minutes to warm up, and so the graduates cheered in the dark, hats flying through the air like tasseled stars.
Graduating seniors arrive with their friends and dates. Photo by Kyle Barr
Graduating seniors arrive with their friends and dates. Photo by Kyle Barr
Graduating seniors arrive with their friends and dates. Photo by Kyle Barr
Graduating seniors arrive with their friends and dates. Photo by Kyle Barr
Graduating seniors arrive with their friends and dates. Photo by Kyle Barr
Graduating seniors arrive with their friends and dates. Photo by Kyle Barr
Andy Fortier stands proud by the prom he helped create. Photo by Kyle Barr
Graduating seniors arrive with their friends and dates. Photo by Kyle Barr
Graduating seniors arrive with their friends and dates. Photo by Kyle Barr
This years theme for prom was late 90s and early 2,000s cartoons. Photo by Kyle Barr
This years theme for prom was late 90s and early 2,000s cartoons. Photo by Kyle Barr
This years theme for prom was late 90s and early 2,000s cartoons. Photo by Kyle Barr
This years theme for prom was late 90s and early 2,000s cartoons. Photo by Kyle Barr
This years theme for prom was late 90s and early 2,000s cartoons. Photo by Kyle Barr
This years theme for prom was late 90s and early 2,000s cartoons. Photo by Kyle Barr
This years theme for prom was late 90s and early 2,000s cartoons. Photo by Kyle Barr
This years theme for prom was late 90s and early 2,000s cartoons. Photo by Kyle Barr
This years theme for prom was late 90s and early 2,000s cartoons. Photo by Kyle Barr
This years theme for prom was late 90s and early 2,000s cartoons. Photo by Kyle Barr
This years theme for prom was late 90s and early 2,000s cartoons. Photo by Kyle Barr
This years theme for prom was late 90s and early 2,000s cartoons. Photo by Kyle Barr
This years theme for prom was late 90s and early 2,000s cartoons. Photo by Kyle Barr
This years theme for prom was late 90s and early 2,000s cartoons. Photo by Kyle Barr
This years theme for prom was late 90s and early 2,000s cartoons. Photo by Kyle Barr
This years theme for prom was late 90s and early 2,000s cartoons. Photo by Kyle Barr
This years theme for prom was late 90s and early 2,000s cartoons. Photo by Kyle Barr
This years theme for prom was late 90s and early 2,000s cartoons. Photo by Kyle Barr
This years theme for prom was late 90s and early 2,000s cartoons. Photo by Kyle Barr
Graduating seniors arrive with their friends and dates. Photo by Kyle Barr
This years theme for prom was late 90s and early 2,000s cartoons. Photo by Kyle Barr
This years theme for prom was late 90s and early 2,000s cartoons. Photo by Kyle Barr
The Port Jefferson Prom Committee. Photo by Drew Biondo
This years theme for prom was late 90s and early 2,000s cartoons. Photo by Kyle Barr
Graduating seniors arrive with their friends and dates. Photo by Kyle Barr
Graduating seniors arrive with their friends and dates. Photo by Kyle Barr
Graduating seniors arrive with their friends and dates. Photo by Kyle Barr
Graduating seniors arrive with their friends and dates. Photo by Kyle Barr
Graduating seniors arrive with their friends and dates. Photo by Kyle Barr
Graduating seniors arrive with their friends and dates. Photo by Kyle Barr
Graduating seniors arrive with their friends and dates. Photo by Kyle Barr
Graduating seniors arrive with their friends and dates. Photo by Kyle Barr
Graduating seniors arrive with their friends and dates. Photo by Kyle Barr
A crowd gathers to watch their kids walk the red carpet. Photo by Kyle Barr
Graduating seniors arrive with their friends and dates. Photo by Kyle Barr
Graduating seniors arrive with their friends and dates. Photo by Kyle Barr
Graduating seniors arrive with their friends and dates. Photo by Kyle Barr
The cars lined up along the drive to Earl L. Vandermeulen High School, and besides the sounds of running motors, the graduating seniors could express nothing but awe. The entire front face of the high school was dressed in a shawl of ’90s and early 2000s nostalgia. Above the entrance, dressed on a large orange blimp calling back to the classic Nickelodeon channel logo, was a sign reading Royalodeon.
The parents of the Port Jeff graduates and members of the prom committee spent hour upon hour of their own time to help construct the pieces to the prom in the months leading up to graduation, and the entire final construction, bringing it to the high school, was done over the previous weekend.
Port Jefferson residents got to experience their efforts the evening of July 1, before the students saw it for the first time. Inside was a splattering of ’90s cartoons, from “Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles” to “The Wild Thornberrys” to “Rugrats,” and the entire dining area designed around “SpongeBob SquarePants.” Lanterns were dressed like jellyfish, hanging from the gym ceiling, and to one side a fully stocked glass case filled with candy was accompanied by cardboard stands of the characters from “Drake & Josh.”
Students arrived awed, not only by the design of the prom but also the number of parents who came to watch their kids walk the red carpet. Kids came ferried in sports cars, but some came in more outlandish style, arriving via boat, the Port Jefferson Jitney, a Qwik Rides Car and even a rickshaw.
The home where an alleged attempted burglary took place. Photo from Google Maps
Port Jefferson residents helped detain an alleged burglar Sunday evening, police said.
Suffolk County Police said Frank Beinlich, 33, undomiciled, illegally entered the home at 22 Gladysz Way in Port Jefferson at around 5:05 p.m. and stole a safe, jewelry, small electronic equipment and clothing. No one was home at the time. Beinlich then allegedly placed several of the stolen items in a wooded area behind the house and called a taxi to pick him up.
When the taxi arrived, neighbors saw Beinlich carrying the safe to the waiting taxi. The neighbors called 911 and then detained Beinlich until 6th precinct officers arrived at the scene.
There was earlier police activity in the area after a neighbor spotted two individuals in the wooded area behind her house and called the police, one neighbor, who wished not to be named, said.
Police said they responded a few hours before the burglary in regard to a stolen vehicle that had been taken from Lake Grove. They are currently trying to determine whether the burglary suspect is also linked with the stolen car.
“They left and we thought it was over — that they had found who they were looking for,“ she said. “But about two hours later I noticed a cab coming down the block.”
The neighbor thought it was pretty unusual and the driver looked like he didn’t know what house to go to.
“He [the driver] parked his car at my neighbor’s and I knew he wasn’t home,” the neighbor said.” From my window I could see the thief behind the gate, he came out to talk to the driver briefly, went back to the house and then came back out with a bag. That’s when I called the police.”
Besides her, two other neighbors had called the police and they tried to keep the suspect in the car telling the driver to turn off the vehicle, but then the burglar jumped out, trying to escape.
“At that point my husband cornered him and with help from another neighbor they held him to the ground until the police came and took him,” she said.
The homeowner whose house was burglarized did not wish to be quoted in this article.
Beinlich was charged with burglary in the 2nd degree and an outstanding parole warrant. He was held overnight in the 6thprecinct and is scheduled to be arraigned at First District Court in Central Islip July 1.
The current Texaco Parking lot was phase three of the Uptown Funk project. Phase three is to be Station Street, built when the Conifer project is finalized. Photo by David Luces
A small parcel on Oakland Avenue in Upper Port Jefferson is part of a planned sale between the Port Jefferson Fire District and Port Jefferson village in order to make room for Station Street, the last part of the eponymous Uptown Funk project.
Mayor Margot Garant said the village has purchased the property for $25,000 as part of a handshake deal with the fire department as an element of creating Station Street. That project has been on hold until final design plans come forward from the Conifer project, which would create mixed-use apartments and retail space in the footprint of the old Bada Bing parcel.
Though the property sale is only one bump toward getting the new street built, it does cross over a small piece of old time village history.
The property, a sand lot of only around 20 or so feet, was once home to one of the district’s siren towers. At its infancy, it was just a simple bell rung by hand to alert neighbors there was a fire.
Fire District Manager Doug Savage said that those towers were used by the district in the mid-20th century, though they were phased out with the advent of modern communication technology. At one point the district contained three of these sirens, with one near the elementary school still being around. The one on top of the firehouse is the only one still used.
“That’s all they had to alert people of a fire call,” he said.
The pole that contained the bell had rotted out, cracked and fell down likely over 20 years ago, Savage said.
Garant said it is a good deal for the fire department, who hasn’t found a use for the property in years.
“They could use the coin in the bank,” she said.
Tom Totton, the fire district commissioners chairman of the board, said the property is not big enough for anyone to build upon.
In a legal notice published by The Port Times Record, it notes the real property is valued at more than $20,000 and less than $100,000. The notice said it has also deemed the property surplus to the fire district.
“The village wants that piece of property, so we have a deal to sell them the property,” he said.
The efforts of Craig den Hartog beautify local hamlets year after year after year
Craig den Hartog in front of his truck often seen by the side of Old Town Road. photo from PJS/T Chamber of Commerce
Craig den Hartog, a Terryville resident, was only a neon ink blot on the side of Old Town Road. A hunched figure in the weeds, his body bent over, his head low to the dirt, he could have been praying.
A sign for Old Town Blooms in front of his planted daffodils. photo from Old Town Blooms Facebook
On the edge of the road, near to passing cars streaming past upward of 50 miles per hour, den Hartog was in his own sanctuary. The side of the road was his chapel that he has cultivated for upward of 10 years. In that time, he has planted tulips and bushes alike, one to keep the poison ivy and other invasive plants down, the other to make the corners along the road striking to anybody who takes the time to look at them.
Den Hartog is the owner of Emerald Magic Lawn Care landscaping company and the founder of Old Town Blooms, a community group that looks to maintain beautification efforts along Old Town Road and into the rest of the local hamlets.
“You got to try and work with, and against, Mother Nature,” said den Hartog as he attacked the weeds along Old Town Road the morning of May 18. One particular stretch was choked with poison ivy and litter.
The founder of Old Town Blooms has made it a personal mission to clean up his local area, though he is an old hand at landscaping. It’s been nearly a decade since he started, but his mission of beautification continues undaunted.
In numerous places the Terryville resident’s flowers bloom — daffodils and tulips. In the Steven J. Crowley Memorial Park, all the flowers that shine bright with oranges and purples are thanks to his constant efforts.
The Old Town Blooms project started nearly a decade ago, with him and neighbors having an “attitude adjustment hour,” calling themselves lawn lizards where a bunch of them would go to neighbors’ houses to do a specific piece of lawn maintenance. That was when the neighbors started to see just how dirty and overgrown Old Town Road had become with weeds, garbage and construction debris, including a growing pile of bricks. After complaining to Brookhaven town and not getting a response, they realized they were on their own.
Since then, Old Town Blooms has planted thousands of flowers along the course of the road from Coram into Terryville and East Setauket. Den Hartog has become notorious in the area for his cleanup efforts and his attempts to get his neighbors involved. Having extra flower bulbs on hand, he has stuck them in his neighbors’ mailboxes and has felt great pride in seeing those flowers bloom in the beds in front of their homes.
Now he is the owner of Holtsville-based Emerald Magic Lawn Care Inc., where he does soil testing and diagnosis. He said those skills work great toward keeping the area safe from dangerous plants, as such things like mulching and which plants prevent weeds is often
very misunderstood.
“A big part of my job is not just diagnosing the problems in the landscape but also educating the client,” he said.
Though the flowers present a united and vibrant resolution to beautification, many of his efforts go unnoticed. Plants that may seem like natural growth are actually specifically planted by the veteran horticulturist. Plants like purple coneflower and sedum are his “volunteers,” or the plants others would just throw away if they become overgrown. They help stem the tide of weeds, and he has to make sure that Brookhaven’s subcontractors don’t come in and mow his preventative plants. Since the program started, he has spent thousands of dollars of his own money on plants to bring life to the two-lane road.
It’s not just Old Town Road that has received his touch but the surrounding community. Joe Coniglione, the principal of Comsewogue High School, said Hartog helped with beautification of the school, sprucing the area up with flowers of gold and blue, the school colors.
“You got to try and work with, and against, Mother Nature.”
— Craig den Hartog
“Him having spread that around this community is really uplifting,” Coniglione said. “His kids went through Comsewogue, they are long gone, but he is still involved in the community and the school… he’s just a great person.”
Den Hartog’s daughter, Michelle, lives in Queens and works at the Developmental Disabilities Institute in Huntington as a teacher, but she tries to come out once or twice a year to help her father. Nearly 10 years ago, when the work started, she could only think how simple a fix it was, and she has started to do the same kind of cleanup and bloom plantings with the children at her school.
“Even starting at young ages, it’s so important to teach taking care of your community,” she said. “Every year, coming down this road in March and April and seeing all the daffodils it makes me so happy — just the seven miles — I’ll just do the drive just to see the blooms.”
Joan Nickeson, the community liaison for the Port Jefferson Station/Terryville Chamber of Commerce had met den Hartog years ago in the early spring, surprised by the sight of bright yellow daffodils popping up along Old Town Road. The Terryville resident would become involved with the chamber and was instrumental in area beautification, helping to remove invasive vines on trees and to maintain the chamber-owned train car at the corner of Route 112.
“At home we call him for our green issues,” she said. “He and my husband Rich could ‘talk trees’ for hours … We are indebted to him.”
Den Hartog has a passion for getting others involved, calling all who help him in his efforts “bloomers.” This passion for beautification has extended well past the confines of Old Town Road. Debbie Engelhardt, the director of the Comsewogue Public Library, said the library organized a community cleanup in conjunction with the overall Great Brookhaven Cleanup. Den Hartog was there offering his expertise, and she said they will be working with him in the future.
“We are indebted to him.”
— Joan Nickeson
“Craig’s contribution was cutting the ‘mother vines’ of the poison ivy plants endangering many of the trees along Terryville Road,” Engelhardt said. “I was amazed at how many trees had been enveloped; most of us drive by and don’t think about these things. I’m glad the community has Craig out there, so we can keep as many trees healthy as possible.”
Town Councilwoman Valerie Cartright (D-Port Jefferson Station) has seen the work of the Terryville horticulturist on multiple occasions.
“He has always played an active role in our community,” Cartright said in an email. “Mr. den Hartog works hard as both a local business owner and on his volunteer endeavor, Old Town Blooms. Craig’s dedication to rallying our community and organizing local beautification efforts is truly commendable and a gift to the Port Jefferson Station-Terryville community.”
However, cleaning up such a vast area with himself and a few of the occasional volunteers does begin to become a mental rock climb. He admitted he does occasionally procrastinate on parts of the project, especially considering its vast size, not to mention his own business and the work he does at his house. But that’s when the script flips, once work begins, the momentum carries him through.
“As soon as I start, I start enjoying myself,” he said. “If you want something done, you just have to start.”
“It’s more than a pretty garden,” said Chris Clapp, a marine scientist for The Nature Conservancy. “It’s a biological process that relies on plants, wood chips and microbes to remove nitrogen in wastewater before it flows back into the environment.”
On June 24, County Executive Steve Bellone (D) joined Clapp with a conglomerate of representatives from both government and the private sector at The Nature Conservancy’s Upland Farms Sanctuary in Cold Spring Harbor to unveil a state-of-the-art method for reducing and eliminating nitrogen from wastewater.
The county expects the new system to be a replacement for cesspools and septic systems, which are blamed for the seeping of nitrogen into Long Island waterways, causing red tides, dead zones and closed beaches.
County Executive Steve Bellone and Nancy Kelley of The Nature Conservancy plant the new garden at Upland Farms.
The issue is a serious concern, Bellone said, as he introduced the county’s Deputy Executive Peter Scully, who is spearheading the county’s Reclaim Our Water Initiative and serves as the Suffolk’s water czar. “Anytime a government appoints a water czar, you know you have problems to address.”
Scully, formerly the director for the Long Island region of the New York State Department of Environmental Conservation, said six other septic alternatives are currently approved.
Long Island is reportedly one of the most densely populated locations in the country without adequate wastewater treatment. Currently, there are 360,000 antiquated cesspools and septic systems. The county expects to set nitrogen reduction targets for watershed areas where replacement holds the most benefit.
The technique, called a vegetated circulating gravel system, is composed of an underground network that essentially connects the drains and toilets of a home or office to plant life and microbial action. It works in two stages to denitrify the wastewater. The first phase discharges wastewater into an underground gravel bed covered with a surprisingly small garden of native plants that takes up nitrogen through its roots. The water is then circulated into an underground box of wood chips that convert the remaining nitrogen into gas, before it’s circulated back to the gravel bed. Once the water is denitrified, it’s dispersed through a buried leaching field.
The county partnered with the Nature Conservancy to develop and implement the system for its Upland Farms Sanctuary. The sanctuary is located a half-mile from Cold Spring Harbor, where water quality has worsened during the last 12 years to the point where the state is officially proposing to designate it an impaired water body.
“The Conservancy is proud to stand alongside the county and our partners to celebrate this exciting new system that taps into the power of nature to combat the nitrogen crisis, putting us on a path to cleaner water,” said Nancy Kelley, Long Island chapter director for The Nature Conservancy.
During the experimental phase the system reduced by half the amount of nitrogen discharged from wastewater. A similar technique has been effective at removing up to 90% in other parts of the country. The system’s designers at Stony Brook University’s Center for Clean Water Technology aim to completely remove nitrogen from discharges.The Upland Farms offices and meeting hall system, which encompasses 156 square feet,serves the equivalent of two to three homes.
Suffolk County Legislator William “Doc” Spencer (D-Centerport) said that denitrification efforts work. The Centerport Yacht Club’s beach was closed for seven years due to water quality issues and reopened in 2015 after the Northport sewer plant upgraded to a denitrification system. Improvements to the harbor storm drain discharges, and a public lawn care campaign about curbing the use of fertilizers, also reportedly helped.
The county has reached a critical juncture and beginning July 1, its new sanitary code for septic systems takes effect, which permits only denitrifying technology.
Justin Jobin, who works on environmental projects with the Suffolk County Department of Health Services, said that he expects to gain approval for a pilot program to accelerate the vegetated circulating gravel system’s public introduction, which could be approved as soon as this summer.The design can be modified, its developers said, to serve single homes or large businesses. In addition to removing nitrogen, the system can also naturally filter out pharmaceuticals and personal care products.Its impacts on 1,4-dioxane are being studied.
Visit www.ReclaimOurWater.info for additional information.
Two men who used a child to help them steal a saw from a Port Jefferson Station store are currently being sought by Suffolk County Police.
Security footage of men entering with child. Photo from SCPD
Two men, accompanied by two children, entered MVP Power Outdoor Equipment, located at 86 Comsewogue Road, May 8 at around 10:30 a.m. Police said one of the men instructed one of the children to remove a Stihl concrete saw from the shelf and the four then walked out of the store. The stolen saw has a value of approximately $1,050.
The men are wanted for grand larceny and endangering the welfare of a child.
Suffolk County Crime Stoppers offers a cash reward of up to $5,000 for information that leads to an arrest. Anyone with information about these incidents can contact Suffolk County Crime Stoppers to submit an anonymous tip by calling 800-220-TIPS (8477) or texting “SCPD” and your message to “CRIMES” (274637). All calls and text messages will be kept confidential.
The boarded-up house at 49 Sheep Pasture Road. Photo by Kyle Barr
The vines inch up the side of the house at 49 Sheep Pasture Road. The grass was recently mowed, but only enough to keep the shrubs and the weeds from overtaking the lawn, and a unsecured Christmas tree light strand dangles from the front porch like a loose appendage. To the right-hand side of the one-acre property is a small, gazebo-like structure where old faded paintings cover the windows in flowers, hearts and what seems to be the names of children. Inside that structure, debris is strewn about, windows are broken and the back wall is caving in.
An outside building at 49 Sheep Pasture Road is filled with debris. Photo by Kyle Barr
On Long Island, zombie homes like this are a dime a dozen tragedy, but local historians look at the home along Sheep Pasture and see an even greater misfortune, since the house has real historical significance, having been built in the pre-Revolutionary War period by the famous Tooker family, which gave the house its name.
“It’s one of the oldest homes still on its original location in the village,” said Nick Acampora, the president of the Port Jefferson Historical Society. “We have zombie problems with the Island, of course, and if it’s a house that was built later on, that has no historical value, people are quick, let’s get it out of here. When you have a 200-year-old building, it’s a little different.”
At a May 20 village board meeting, village officials voted to have the house at 49 Sheep Pasture Road demolished, citing the general state of the building and complaints of the residents.
At the May meeting, acting Chief of Code Enforcement Fred Leute helped present a number of pictures to those who attended the meeting. This included images of needles, used alcoholic bottles and other obvious signs of vagrancy.
The village has yet to put out bids for the demolition, and Mayor Margot Garant said the village has paused in any further action on the building while continuing to take care of the grass and state of the property, all the while hoping to see what may come out of trying to communicate with the property owner.
“I’m glad we’ve brought awareness to the property because it hasn’t been in good repair for 18 months,” Garant said. “If they can purchase it, that would be great.”
The largest issue at hand is the property is privately owned, and it does not exist on any current historic registries. The village has reached out to the current owners, Jericho-based Tab Suffolk Acquisitions LLC, with no success.
“I don’t think anybody’s been ignoring this, it’s just been a difficulty with the owner,” the historical society president said.
In the book “The Seven Hills of Port” by the late Robert Sisler and his wife Patricia, the house is referenced as “the only 18th century house still intact today in our village sitting in its original footprint on its original foundation,” being dated back to the 1740s.
In fact, the manner in which the book, written more than three decades ago, describes the house could not be any more distinct than how the home looks now. The book references Roman numerals on the attic rafters of hand-hewn post-and-beam construction. The building also contains a beehive domed oven in the fireplace and an old coat cellar in the east end of the building and an additional 20th-century modification to the living room for hiding liquor during the prohibition era, according to the book. Additional later modifications include added dormers and a porch. The book says even the original windows exist on the building’s north face.
“We do have a couple of houses from that time that have been moved, but this one is still on its original property,” said Catherine Quinlan, historical society trustee.
However, comparing then to now is staggering. A number of local residents who attended the May meeting asked for the building to be razed, saying they knew it had been broken into and used by vagrants in the past.
“To have a house from the 1700s, with this kind of context, is extraordinary.”
— Steve Englebright
State Assemblyman Steve Englebright (D-Setauket) said he had been in touch with both the village and historical society, adding the preservation of such a venerable home would be a top priority for him and his staff. He said there should be a chance to bring in a historical architect to verify the real historical nature of the location, and he would be working to identify funds necessary to take over the building from the current owners and creating stewardship over the building with a nonprofit.
“To have a house from the 1700s, with this kind of context, is extraordinary,” the assemblyman said.
Preservation Long Island, a nonprofit historical preservation organization, posted June 6 about the house to its Facebook page.
“Instead of a village-funded demolition, perhaps the village could fund an independent engineering assessment for a second opinion on the condition?” it reads. “Long Island’s oldest houses are surprisingly resilient thanks to old growth timber-frames and incredible craftsmanship.”
The mayor and other officials were hesitant to allow people into the building since she said the engineers who studied it had told her there was major structural defect in the building.
“We’re really concerned about people going into the premises and literally falling through the floor,” she said.
In the book, it references the owner as of 1992 when the book was written as Tony Chiarini, saying he was rewiring the house at the time.
Acampora said he understood the position the derelict property has put the village in, and only hopes that the historical society is contacted before the building is demolished or condemned in order for them to see if they can acquire any and all historical items from the house.
“They have to answer to the folks around it,” Acampora said.
Bethel Hobbs Community Farm in Centereach holds an annual community race to raise money for the farm. Photo by Kyle Barr
To address the critical shortfall of skilled young and beginning farmers and ranchers, congressional leaders, including Rep. Lee Zeldin (R-Shirley), introduced June 13 the Young Farmer Success Act. If adopted, the bill would encourage careers in agriculture, by adding farmers and ranchers to the Public Service Loan Forgiveness Program, an existing program that currently includes teachers, nurses, first responders and other public service professions. Under the program, eligible public service professionals who make 10 years of income-driven student loan payments can have the balance of their loans forgiven.
U.S. Rep. Lee Zeldin speaks during an interview at TBR News Media. Photo by Kevin Redding
“Our country’s farmers are part of the backbone of our nation, and while they are critical to ensuring American families have food to put on the table, all too often the next generation of farmers is finding that a career in agriculture makes it difficult to put food on their own table,” Zeldin said. “After graduating college, aspiring farmers are saddled with crippling student loan debt and the daunting costs of agricultural businesses, oftentimes driving them from a career feeding our country.”
The new legislation will allow the next generation of farmers to pursue a career serving the American people, eliminating the disincentive to study agriculture in school and getting them on the farm when they graduate.
Farming is an expensive business to enter, in part because of skyrocketing land prices. Young and beginning farmers often see small profits or even losses in their first years of business. With the majority of existing farmers nearing retirement age, and very few young people entering the farming or ranching profession, America is beginning to face an agricultural crisis. Since the Dust Bowl, the federal government has taken steps to support farmers, and the Young Farmer Success Act supports farmers through a different approach — finding a tangible pathway to pay off student loans that will offer incentives to a new generation of career farmers.
“Eighty-one percent of the young farmers who responded to our 2017 national survey hold a bachelor’s degree or an advanced degree,” Martin Lemos, National Young Farmers Coalition interim executive director, said. “This means there is a very small population of beginning farmers without student loan debt. With the average age of farmers now nearing 60 years, and farmers over 65 outnumbering those under 35 by 6:1, we need to do more for the next generation of farmers to succeed. We are grateful for the bill’s bipartisan champions, Representatives Joe Courtney (D-CT), Glenn ‘G.T.’ Thompson (R-PA), Josh Harder (D-CA) and Lee Zeldin. With the support of Congress, we will encourage those who wish to pursue a career in farming to serve their country by building a brighter future for U.S. agriculture.”
In 2011, National Young Farmers Coalition conducted a survey of 1,000 young farmers and found 78 percent of respondents struggled with a lack of capital. A 2014 follow-up survey of 700 young farmers with student loan debt found that the average burden of student loans was $35,000. The same study also found 53 percent of respondents are currently farming, but have a hard time making their student loan payments and another 30 percent are interested in farming, but haven’t pursued it as a career because their salary as a farmer wouldn’t be enough to cover their student loan payments.