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BOT, Residents Agree on Opposition To Proposed Casino at Belmont

Grassroots group appeals to BOT for village support

Floral Park residents can bet their bottom dollar that Mayor Thomas J. Tweedy and the Board of Trustees are not vying for a casino at Belmont Park. In his Mayor’s Message dated Jan. 9, Mayor Tweedy wrote, “I have worked diligently as mayor to avoid having a casino at Belmont Park, and that remains a top priority for this new year of 2012.” He reiterated that proclamation at the Board of Trustees meeting on Tuesday, Jan. 17, which came on the heels of a Stop the Belmont Casino community meeting initiated by concerned residents the week before.

“I want to thank all of you for your support and for your efforts,” Mayor Tweedy said before opening up the floor to residents.

“Why do we need another casino built, while others are struggling for financial survival?” asked a Carnation Avenue resident, who suggested that the majority of Nassau County residents who live in the area around the proposed casino are against it. He also expressed concern over the negative social implications a casino in Floral Park’s backyard would bring, namely “exposing the local school children to alcoholism, gambling and prostitution.”

With regard to the proximity of the proposed casino at Belmont to Floral Park-Bellerose School and Floral Park Memorial High School, the Stop the Belmont Casino campaign is proposing its own constitutional amendment to the bill that will be presented in Albany to legalize gambling in New York State, aptly named CAERS, for Children Adolescent and Elderly Resident Safety Amendment. At the core of the amendment is that no casinos shall be built within two miles of a school, explained Edward Groshans, one of three residents who are spearheading the grassroots campaign. Once the amendment is finalized, the group plans to submit it to elected officials, primarily to Democratic Senator Jack Martins, from whom the group hopes to gain support and a voice to represent the best interests of the community, according to Groshans, who is a lifelong Floral Park resident.

 “There have been many threats to the lifestyles that thrive here,” said Groshans, but “none has been this potentially devastating nor as reprehensible as the one that Democratic Governor Cuomo is planning for Belmont Park and the entire state of New York.”

Groshans and his group plan to push full-steam ahead. The campaign has picked up so much momentum that the group is seeking a larger meeting space. Groshans requested use of the Floral Park Recreation Center for future meetings, which will also enable handicapped members to more readily attend. He also requested the board’s endorsement of a petition, which was launched last week to garner as much opposition to the proposed casino at Belmont as possible.

While the Board of Trustees is also opposed to the proposed casino, Village Attorney John Ryan said, “The issue of Constitutional Amendment language, the issue of use of the Recreation Center, the issue of the petition for our support raises a lot of legal issues.” Duncan MacDonald, who is spearheading the campaign with Groshans and who spoke at the Board of Trustees meeting, will work with Ryan to resolve those issues.

To be sure, Floral Park will rally, as it did with “the third track…Stop and Shop … the Q79 bus … the New York Jets looking to go into Belmont Park … and [stopping a child care center from opening in the West End of Floral Park and opening it in the “backstretch” of Floral Park, where it was needed,” recounted Tweedy.

“I’ve lived [in Floral Park] for 55 years…and I have no intentions of seeing it changed,” Tweedy said. He vowed to work to see that the value of residents’ homes stay the same or rise.

In the meantime, he urged residents to take immediate action by writing to Governor Cuomo and local elected officials to express their opposition to a casino at Belmont Park and to legalized gambling in New York State.

News

L.I. native John Tesh set to bring Big Band to Westbury

The quintessential example of being able to take the boy out of his hometown but not the hometown out of the boy, John Tesh once again returns to the area in support of his latest musical project. On Saturday, May 12, he will be playing the NYCB Theatre at Westbury in support of his latest album, Big Band.

A former Garden City resident, Tesh has always carried a special place in his heart for the village despite the fact that his family moved out following his graduation from high school in 1970. Those formative years living on Seabury Road inspired him to not only lend his hometown’s name to the title track of his 1989 album, but do the same when he founded a recording imprint in 2000. When asked about this inspiration while preparing for the upcoming tour at his Los Angeles home, Tesh came up with an interesting rationale.

Elmont School District taxpayers could see a 6.9 percent increase

Residents attending the Stewart Manor Board of Trustees meeting on Tuesday, May 1, gave a resounding thumbs-down to the 2012-13 proposed budget for the Elmont Union Free School District. The proposed $78.56 million budget marks a 2.8 percent increase from 2011-12 and would yield a 6.87 percent tax levy jump over last year. The majority of village residents live within the Elmont district, but many homes on Fernwood Terrace are zoned for Garden City public schools.

Residents present at the May 1 meeting questioned why Elmont’s proposed increase is so much higher than the other 56 districts in Nassau County, with the exception of neighboring Floral Park-Bellerose, which is proposing a budget that would increase taxes by 6.58 percent. Residents also expressed concern that the nearly 6.9 percent increase exceeds the state’s 2 percent cap on property tax increases.


Calendar

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