Bedford Town Clerk – Lisbeth “Boo” Fumagalli – 5 Stars

Image = Lisbeth %22Boo%22 Fumagalli Bedford clerk 24
Lisbeth “Boo” Fumagalli

1. Freedom Of Information Compliance And Knowledge Ratings

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Ms. Lisbeth Fumagalli was given some very challenging public documents to provide by Freedom of Information request. One document had to be researched by the town attorney creating a slight delay.

All of our FOIL Requests have been acknowledged and filled flawlessly by the Ms. Fumagalli

2. Email Address For Filing FOI Requests 

townclerk@bedfordny.gov

Or

lfumagalli@bedfordny.gov

3, Mailing Address For Filing FOI Requests

Town Clerk
321 Bedford Road
Bedford Hills, NY 10507

4. Experience:

Lisbeth “Boo” Fumagalli has been the Bedford Town Clerk for 14 years, but seems to to know how to respond to Freedom of Information requests for public documents.

Bea Rhodes ran for Town Clerk of Bedford in 2009 on the D/WFP lines and lost to Lisbeth Fumagalli

She lives in Bedford Hills, has two grown sons, and a new granddaughter.

FACEBOOK: Boo Ford Fumagalli

https://www.facebook.com/boo.fordfumagalli

5. From The Town Website:

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To obtain a marriage license in the Town of Bedford:

      1. Marriage licenses are issued by appointment only and both parties must come together. Hours are from 8:30 to 4 daily, Monday thru Friday. If you need an after-hours appointment, please call the Town Clerk to make arrangements.
      2. Bring the following documents with you:
        • An original birth certificate or certified duplicate issued by the registrar of vital statistics in the city where you were born. A photocopy is not acceptable.
        • Photo identification: a driver’s license, non-driver’s id or a valid passport.
        • If either of the applicants has been previously married, a certified copy of the decree of divorce, dissolution of marriage or death certificate is required. If there have been multiple previous marriages, this applies for each marriage. Note: If any of the documents listed are not written in English, the document must be translated by a certified translator. A number of translation services are listed in the yellow pages.
        • The fee for the license is $40.
        • There is a 24  hour waiting period after the license is issued in which you may not get married. The license is then valid for sixty days beginning the day after the license is issued.Reporting of Wild Animals

Chapter 680 of the Laws of 2002 enacted General Municipal Law 209-cc, requires the annual reporting of the presence of wild animals. The law states that each person owing, possessing, or harboring a wild animal as set forth in 209-cc must report its presence to the Town Clerk’s office on or before April 1 of each year. The town clerk will forward a copy of the completed report form to each state police troop, local police and fire department and ambulance/emergency services having jurisdiction over the hamlet where the wild animal resides. A copy of this law and form to report the Presence of Wild Animals is available at the Town Clerk’s office or can be found on this website under Resources/Forms & Applications under the heading Town Clerk.

Links

6. Media Reports

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DAILY VOICE: Bedford Town Officials Kick Off 2016 With New Terms

Officials in the town of Bedford began 2016 by taking their oaths of office to start their new terms.

Lee Roberts, a former supervisor who retired two years prior, officially rejoined the town board when she took her oath to become a councilwoman. Incumbent Supervisor Chris Burdick and incumbent Councilman Don Scott were each sworn following successful re-election victories in November.

Also sworn in, albeit it merely for ceremonial purposes, was Francis Corcoran…..

Please Read More Here:

http://bedford.dailyvoice.com/news/bedford-town-officials-kick-off-2016-with-new-terms/616139/

 

BEDFORD REPUBLICANS: November 3rd, 2009 Election Results

Congratulations to Lee Roberts, Boo Fumagalli, Peter Chryssos, Francis Corcoran and Eric Jacobsen for their victories in the Local Bedford Elections on November 3rd, 2009.

7. Notes

This Ratings Page Has Been Updated With Additional Information

About Bedford, New York

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Bedford is a town in Westchester County, New York, USA. The population was 17,335 at the 2010 census. The town of Bedford is located in the northeastern part of Westchester County, and contains the three hamlets of Bedford Hills, Bedford, and Katonah.

The town of Bedford was founded on December 23, 1680, when 22 Puritans from Stamford, Connecticut, purchased a tract of land three miles square known as the “Hopp Ground” from Chief Katonah and several other Native Americans for coats, blankets, wampum and cloth.

Bedford was made a part of Connecticut in 1697 when a patent fixed the boundaries as a six-mile square. Only when KingWilliam III of England issued a royal decree in 1700 settling a boundary dispute did Bedford become part of New York.

The town served as the county seat of Westchester County during the American Revolutionary War after the Battle of White Plains, until Bedford was burned by the British in July 1779.

After the Revolution, Bedford was made one of two seats of county government, alternating with White Plains, until 1870. Westchester County’s oldest government building is the Court House in Bedford village, which was built in 1787 and renovated in the 1960s.

The Bedford Village Historic District, Caramoor Center for Music and the Arts, Palmer-Lewis Estate, and The Woodpile are listed on the National Register of Historic Places…..

Please Read More Here:

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bedford_(town),_New_York

Area: 39.42 mi²

Elevation: 381′

Population: 17,335 (2010)

Area code: 914

More Information About Bedford, NY

The Town of Bedford traces its origins to a land transaction, which occurred on December 23, 1680. It was on that date that 22 Puritan men from Stamford, Connecticut purchased land of roughly three miles square known as the “Hopp Ground”. The lands were bought from the native Mohegan Indian Chiefs for an assortment of coats, blankets and wampum totaling “46 pounds 16 shillings and ten pence.” A copy of the original deed is displayed in the Town House lobby. The new “proprietors” promptly set about to lay out their new settlement, planning for a meeting house, grist mill on the nearby Mianus River, and a burying ground.

Today’s Village Green, the graveyard and surrounding principal roadways remain substantially as they were originally planned in 1681. In 1682 the Connecticut Colony legislature established the name of Bedford for the new settlement. As there is no evidence of a linkage of the settlers to Bedford, England, it is thought that the name was chosen by the legislators in accordance with its principle of keeping alive the memory of England. For the next 18 years, as both the colonies of Connecticut and New York grew, a dispute developed as to which colony Bedford belonged. In 1700, by Royal Decree, King William III established that Bedford was “henceforth and forever” part of the royal colony of New York. By 1723, through additional purchases from Chief Katonah and other Mohegan chiefs the Town had grown to over thirty-six square miles. Bedford’s population also grew rapidly. In 1710, but only 156 residents were listed.

By 1790, the population was 2,470 persons. Bedford was part of Connecticut in 1697 when a patent fixed the boundaries as a six-mile square and it wasn’t until England’s King William issued a royal degree in 1700, to settle a boundary dispute that Bedford became part of New York.

The Town’s importance grew during the Colonial period and it was a model for town meetings and self government. Bedford served as the wartime Westchester County seat during the Revolutionary War after the Battle of White Plains and until Bedford was burned by the British on July 11, 1779.

THE HAMLETS Three distinct hamlets, each with its own “personality” and rich history, make up the Town of Bedford. The original 1680 Bedford settlement was in BEDFORD VILLAGE in the southeastern portion of the Town, with its Village Green and historic buildings dating to the 18th and early 19th centuries. Among these are the 1787 Court House and several homes built after the British burned the village during the Revolution. In 1972, the Bedford Village Historic District was established by local ordinance and is listed on both the New York State and the National Register of Historic Places. The burying ground, established in 1681, was apparently still in use after the Colonial period as the latest headstone dates to 1885. A museum in the Court House is open to the public. A museum in the Court House, which is maintained by the Bedford Historical Society, contains exhibits of Bedford’s history and is open to the public.

KATONAH named after Chief Katonah, this hamlet was once located several miles to the north. It was moved to accommodate the expansion of the watershed for New York City. As a result of the move in the late 1890s, and the rebuilding of a new town, the largely preserved architecture provides an attractive glimpse of the Victorian era. The Katonah Village Improvement Society, which still exists today, provided direction for the move, and landscaping for the “new Katonah” was largely the work of the renowned firm of G.S. and B.S. Olmstead. In 1983, the Historic District of Katonah was listed on the New York State and National registers of Historic Places. Katonah is a vibrant hamlet with a lively and most attractive commercial area. Additionally, it is widely known as home to the Caramoor Music Festival, the Katonah Museum of Art (formerly The Katonah Gallery), and the John Jay Homestead.

BEDFORD HILLS, originally known as Bedford Station, this hamlet grew up in the mid nineteenth century, primarily to serve Bedford Village. Following the Civil War it grew to be a transportation and commercial hub for the area. By the early twentieth century residents of farms and estates in the broader area of the hamlet, petitioned the Town to change the name to Bedford Hills. A Centennial celebration of this event occurred in May of 2010. Bedford Hills extends from its bustling business center at the railroad station to farms and estates as it spreads eastward along Harris, Babbitt and Bedford Center Roads, and south along the Route 117 business corridor toward Mount Kisco. The Community House (originally built to serve the needs of returning World War I veterans) is located in Bedford Hills, as is the Bedford Hills Correctional Facility, the largest women’s prison in New York State. Bedford Hills is the seat of Town government and home to the Town House, built in 1927.

THE GOVERNMENT

The Town of Bedford, a municipal corporation and a Town of the First Class under the Laws of the State of New York, is governed by a five-member Town Board which functions as the legislative body of the Town and is responsible for the “health, safety and welfare” of its residents. The Board is composed of four Town Councilmen, each elected to a four-year term, and the Supervisor. The Supervisor, who functions as the Chief Fiscal Officer and Chief Operating Officer of the Town, is elected to a two-year term. A Deputy Supervisor is appointed to assist with the varied duties of the Supervisor’s Office in their absence. In addition to its legislative responsibilities, the Town Board sets Town policy and is responsible for the adoption of the Town budget each fall. The Town Board also makes appointments to the various boards and advisory groups that operate within the framework of the Town’s government. Among these groups are the Planning Board, Zoning Board of Appeals, Wetlands Control Commission, Conservation Board, Drug Abuse Prevention Council, Energy Advisory Panel and the Historic and Recreation advisory groups.

We often have openings on these and other Town Boards/Commissions and Committees all of which can be found on the Town’s web site (www.BedfordNY.gov). Letters of interest to should be sent to the Town Supervisor at Supervisor@BedfordNY.gov or mailed to the Supervisor’s Office at 321 Bedford Road, Bedford Hills, NY 10507. Traditionally, the Town Board meets on the first and third Tuesdays of each month at 8pm in the Town House in Bedford Hills, except when a holiday causes rescheduling. All meetings are open to the public and only certain, legally sensitive subjects, as defined by the New York State Freedom of Information Act, may be discussed in executive session. Agendas and minutes of these meetings can be found at www.BedfordNY.gov/html/meetings.html. The Town of Bedford, its 39.3 square miles embracing the three hamlets in the rolling hills and rugged topography of northern Westchester County continues to adhere to the objectives of its Town Plan calling on the Town to continue as a predominantly residential community of exceptional character.

TOWN OFFICES Bedford’s town government offices are located in two buildings located at 321, Bedford Road and 425 Cherry Street in Bedford Hills where residents can find almost every necessary municipal service. Offices are open weekdays from 8:30am to 4:30pm. The Town’s website is www.BedfordNY.gov. Detailed information is available on the website for all departments and services or call the Town Clerk’s office at 666-4534 and we will help direct you.

The Town House building at 321 Bedford Road houses the following offices:

The ASSESSOR’S OFFICE (Assessor@BedfordNY.gov) can help a resident find out about the assessment on their home and property. Questions about current taxes, overdue taxes, and tax rates can be answered in the RECEIVER OF TAXES OFFICE (Receiver@BedfordNY.gov) where school bills may be paid in September & January and where Town and County tax bills may be paid in April.

The SUPERVISOR’S OFFICE (Supervisor@BedfordNY.gov) is the busiest in the Town House and where the Supervisor, as Chief Executive Officer, oversees the Town’s day-to-day operations. The statutory duties of the Supervisor are only a small part of the tasks which accrue to this role as community and intercommunity leader.

The PERSONNEL DEPARTMENT (Personnel@BedfordNY.gov) is most employees’ first exposure to the Town of Bedford. Openings for employment as well as managing promotional opportunities and benefits for current employees are also done in this office.

The COURT CLERK’S OFFICE (Court@BedfordNY.gov) is where you would pay any parking ticket issued in the Town. Two Town Justices hold sessions of Criminal Court, Civil Court and Traffic Court. Any one wishing to sue in Small Claims Court, where claims cannot exceed $3,000, should visit this office.

And tucked away on the top floor of the Town House is the TOWN HISTORIAN’S OFFICE (Historian@BedfordNY.gov) which is open limited hours by appointment.

At 425 Cherry Street, you will find the following services:

First Floor:

The Bedford RECREATION AND PARKS DEPARTMENT (Recreation@BedfordNY.gov) offers a comprehensive variety of programs and services year round for residents of all ages. In addition to the Town’s three active parks and Dog Park, this department maintains bikeways, greenbelts, historic properties, administers the Meals-On-Wheels program as well as offering a lively seniors program. In each hamlet the department oversees a summer day camp program for elementary school children and a Tiny Tots program for preschool children. A copy of the latest brochure is available at: www.BedfordNY.gov/html/recreation.html.

Second Floor: The FINANCE OFFICE (Finance@BedfordNY.gov) headed by the Town Comptroller, assists in the creation and administration of the Town’s budget, pays the Town’s bills and oversees payroll for the nearly 173 employees. The WATER DEPARTMENT (Water@BedfordNY.gov), a part of the Department of Public Works, is responsible for four water districts serving Bedford. The Cedar Downs District serves approximately 62 customers in the ‘”Stanwood” area of town with a single well and storage tank. Nearly 2,200 homes in sections of Bedford Hills and Katonah are served by the Consolidated Water District while the Farms District in Bedford Village serves 82 customers and The Old Post Road District services 44.

On the Third Floor you will find: The PLANNING DEPARTMENT (Planning@BedfordNY.gov) and Director of Planning should be the first point of inquiry regarding any special permits and property questions relating to subdivisions or any change of use of land or buildings. The Planning Board oversees the planning and development of the Town. In addition, the Planning Department works closely with the WETLANDS CONTROL COMMISSION (Wetlands@BedfordNY.gov) also on the third floor. The office of the BUILDING INSPECTOR and BUILDING DEPARTMENT (Building@BedfordNY.gov) is where requests for building permits, certificates of compliance or occupancy should be directed while the ZONING BOARD OF APPEALS (Zoning@BedfordNY.gov) office can assist a resident wishing to appeal a decision by the Planning Board, Building Inspector or Town Board, depending on the issue.

307 Bedford Road is the home of: The Town’s full-time POLICE DEPARTMENT (BedfordPolice@BedfordNY.gov) consists of 40 full-time sworn officers. In addition to the Chief of Police, there are three Lieutenants, six patrol Sergeants, one Detective Sergeant, four Detectives (including a Youth Officer), one School Resource Officer, one civilian dispatcher, two part-time civilian dispatchers, one full-time Parking/Dog Control Officer, one full-time and one part-time Parking Enforcement Officer, one full-time Office Assistant, one part-time Records Clerk, five school crossing guards, and one fulltime Community Service Worker. The Police Department is a full-service agency providing patrol and investigative services 24 hours a day, seven days a week.

The department is also the primary 911 answering point for the Town and provides its own police dispatching. The department participates in the DARE program, Westchester County STOP-DWI Program and hosts the Westchester County Zone 5 Arson Investigation Team. The Department also has an Accident Investigation Team, CERT Program, Drug Recognition Experts, Bicycle Patrol Unit, and provides most of its own in-service training with in-house Training Instructors. A police Explorer program was established in 2010 to attract teens to the law enforcement profession. The department also provides inspections of child safety seats free of charge.

301 Adams Street:

Maintenance of the Town’s 120 miles of roads, including 32 miles of dirt roads, is the responsibility of a full-time HIGHWAY DEPARTMENT (Highway@BedfordNY.gov) which has its office and garage on Adams Street, Bedford Hills, and a garage facility on Crusher Road, Bedford Village. The department’s 23 members, directed by the Commissioner of Public Works, are responsible for drainage work, snow removal and maintenance of bridges and commuter parking lots.

BOARDS Residents are encouraged to play an active role in the Town and those interested in serving on the various boards, whether regulatory or advisory, should communicate that interest to the Supervisor (Supervisor@BedfordNY.gov) or any member of the Town Board.

REGULATORY BOARDS

True to its New England tradition of self government and service, the Town of Bedford is served by several boards of volunteer citizens who give their time and energy in a multitude of capacities to oversee and administer the Town’s various ordinances and local laws.

The first Zoning Law in Bedford was adopted in 1681 and it decreed that no house lot should be less than three acres. The regulations today, detailed in the Town’s Zoning Ordinance and Town Development Plan, are much more complex and deal extensively and sensitively with today’s environmental and human concerns. The Town’s various regulations, ordinances and local laws are published in the Code of the Town of Bedford which is available on-line at our web-site, in each of the three hamlets’ libraries and can also be purchased at the Town Clerk’s Office.

The planning and zoning policies provide for the development of the Town as a predominantly low density residential community with a limited amount of higher density and multi-family residences and non-residential support facilities in appropriate areas.

The PLANNING BOARD (http://www.bedfordny.gov/html/boards_planning.html) oversees the planning and development approval processes. Any subdivision of property within the Town must be reviewed and approved by this board, which is also responsible for reviewing site plans, new roads, and new commercial and multi-family residential buildings. The five members of this board are appointed to five-year terms by the Town Board.

Variances to the Zoning Ordinance must be granted by the five-member ZONING BOARD OF APPEAL (www.BedfordNY.gov/html/boards_zoning.html) which meets on a regular basis in open meetings in the Town House at 425 Cherry Street on the first Wednesday of each month. Additionally, it is the responsibility of this board to decide appeals from any order, requirement, decision or determination made by an administrative official or agency charged with enforcing the Zoning Ordinance. ZBA members serve five-year terms.

After adopting a Wetlands Ordinance in 1973, the Town Board created the WETLANDS CONTROL COMMISSION (www.BedfordNY.gov/html/comm_wetlands.html) to implement the intent of that ordinance. This five-member Commission is charged with reviewing and recommending action on matters referred by other boards, including the Town, Planning and Zoning boards. The Commission’s main responsibility is to decide on the issuance of permits for any work in or around wetlands as defined on the Town’s official Wetlands Map. The members of the Wetlands Control Commission serve three-year terms.

VOLUNTARY BOARDS

The CONSERVATION BOARD (www.BedfordNY.gov/html/boards_conservation.html), a 9-member board, was created to advise on the development, management and protection of natural resources, to keep an inventory and map defining the Town’s open space, to be involved in projects, such as recycling, which have an effect on the environment. The members, appointed by the Town Board, serve 2-year term.

Also serving the Town, the RECREATION AND PARKS ADVISORY COMMITTEE (www.BedfordNY.gov/html/boards_rec_advisory.html), a 9-member panel serving in an advisory capacity to the Recreation and Parks Department. This committee, whose members are drawn from all 3 hamlets, meets the 2nd Wednesday of the month.

BLUE MOUNTAIN HOUSING DEVELOPMENT (www.BedfordNY.gov/html/boards_blue_mountain.html) serves the Town of Bedford as a non-profit organization whose goal is to promote diversified housing while at the same time preserving the integrity of the community plan. The members of Blue Mountain also serve on the BEDFORD HOUSING AGENCY, a public agency created to administer all facets of moderate income housing from tenant selection to rent increases.

DRUG ABUSE PREVENTION COUNCIL www.BedfordNY.gov/html/boards_drug_abuse.html a 5-member volunteer group provides the community and its schools with programs to prevent the abuse of drugs and alcohol by youth and adults alike. The Council, funded by three towns: Town of Bedford, Pound Ridge and Lewisboro along with New York State, provides a direct drug education service and addresses the underlying causes of drug abuse.

The regulations of the KATONAH AND BEDFORD VILLAGE HISTORIC DISTRICTS are within the purview of their respective HISTORIC DISTRICT REVIEW COMMISSIONS which are charged with maintaining the character of their respective Districts by overseeing new building, reconstruction, alternations or demolition of existing structures. In addition, the Town has a HISTORIC BUILDING PRESERVATION COMMITTEE, established in 2003 to help preserve the historical, archeological, architectural and cultural heritage of the Town. To obtain more information or contact any of these committees, please contact the Building Department at 666-8040 or Building@BedfordNY.gov.

The Town of Bedford is committed to energy conservation and to that end has appointed an ENERGY ADVISORY PANEL (www.BedfordNY.gov/html/green.htm). With their help the Town has committed to reducing its carbon footprint 20% by 2020 to promote a sustainable community. Be sure to take a look at all the energy saving tips and information on our website
(www.BedfordNY.gov/html/green_tips.htm).

In addition, the Town has a RECYCLING ADVISORY COMMITTEE (www.BedfordNY.gov/html/committees_recycling.html) formed in 1990 which is responsible for the formation of our recycling center at 301 Adams Street, Bedford Hills, as well as an educational brochure for our residents.

The mission of the Town’s COMMUNICATIONS COMMITTEE is to provide recommendations to the Town Board in areas such as cable franchise agreements and possible television/web casting of Town meetings.

The Town is committed to preserving its history and has recently appointed a CEMETERY COMMISSION to develop a master plan for restoring and preserving the Town’s more than 30 cemeteries. Since 1997 we have had a TREE ADVISORY BOARD (www.BedfordNY.gov/html/boards_tree_advisory.html) which acts as an advisory group to the Town and its residents on matters related to preservation, planting and removal of trees.

OTHER INFORMATION ANIMALS Dogs: Owning a dog in the Town of Bedford comes with its rewards but also its responsibilities. Restrictions are not only on the animal but on his owner as well. These regulations are detailed in the Dog Control Ordinance, Chapter 48 of the Town Code. All dogs 4 months and older must be licensed. License applications are on our website: www.BedfordNY.gov/html/forms.html scroll to Town Clerk or in the Town Clerk’s Office at the Town House, 321 Bedford Road.

The Town charges a local fee in addition to the State fee. Dogs are not allowed to run unfettered in any Town park (except Canine Commons at Beaver Dam Park with a valid permit) or in the hamlet business areas. A Dog Control Officer is employed by the Town and, along with the Police Department, is empowered to enforce the ordinance.

DOGS ARE NOT allowed to:
o Engage in excessive loud howling or barking
o Damage property or commit a nuisance
o Chase, harass or intimidate any person
o Habitually chase or bark at motor/moving vehicles, bicycles, or other animals,
o Run at large when in season o Attack, bite, molest, or maul any person.

Dogs violating these restrictions may be seized by the Dog Control Officer and a summons may be issued that is answerable in the Town Court.

Cats: Cats do not need licenses in Bedford and you will find additional information on keeping animals in Bedford, in the Town Code, Chapter 125. Horses: Horses are permitted in two and four-acre residential areas with two acres being required for the first horse and one acre for each additional horse. The Zoning Ordinance should be consulted regarding the keeping of horses.

CABLE COMPANIES: You may contact Cablevision, (914) 962-4444, (www.cablevision.com) or Verizon, (914) 741-8740, (www22.verizon.com). Both companies offer TV services and have a franchise agreement with the Town of Bedford. CIVIC GROUPS: Civic Groups abound in all the hamlets, they are all described in a wonderful book called; Bedford….”Our Town” which can be found at www.BedfordNY.gov/html/comm-resources.html.

CULTURE: The cultural life of Bedford — and northern Westchester County — is enhanced significantly by the presence of The Katonah Museum of Art, (www.katonahmuseum.org) formerly the Katonah Gallery, considered the premier gallery north of New York City, and Caramoor (www.Caramoor.org) an outstanding center for musical performances during the summer months and educational opportunities year round.

These two cultural landmarks bring to the northern county performances and exhibits of national importance.

The John Jay Homestead, (www.johnjayhomestead.org) the retirement home of John Jay, the first Chief Justice of the United States and twice governor of New York State, was occupied by his descendants until 1958 when it was purchased by Westchester County and turned over to New York State. The Homestead, now a State Historic Site and a National Historic Landmark, has been restored and refurnished with authentic heirlooms and is known for its collection of American portraits by artists such as Gilbert Stuart. The Homestead is open to the public and guided tours of the house and grounds can be arranged by appointment. Special events include frequent musical concerts, craft programs and Christmas program.

Westmoreland Sanctuary (www.westmoreland.org) is just one of several natural areas throughout Bedford which promotes preservation throughout the region.

With two-thirds of its 625 acres in Bedford, Westmoreland offers a variety of activities and lectures whose topics range from pond ecology to camp cooking. A 200 year old building, a former Presbyterian Church from Bedford Village, was reconstructed at the Chestnut Ridge Road entrance in 1973, and serves as the sanctuary’s museum and nature center.

The Mianus River Gorge Preserve, our nation’s oldest Natural History Landmark and The Nature Conservancy’s pioneer land project, maintains a five mile hiking trail through a pre-colonial hemlock forest and 555 acres at the end of Mianus Road.

The Audubon Society (www.BedfordAudubon.org) conducts bird walks periodically at the 28 acre Palmer H. Lewis Wildlife Sanctuary off Route 121. The Agnes and Eugene Meyer Nature Preserve off Oregon Road are open for hiking and nature study as are the Marsh, Butler and Beaver Dam sanctuaries.

Bedford is served by New York City newspapers, radio, television and cable televisions stations as well as several local newspapers and a Mount Kisco radio station, WVIP.

ELECTRIC AND GAS: Currently both New York State Gas and Electric (www.NYSEG.com) and Con Edison (www.ConEd.com) service the Town of Bedford, depending on where you live. Please check with previous homeowner or a neighbor to determine which supplier you should contact.

FIRE PROTECTION AND AMBULANCE SERVICE: In each of the three hamlets fire protection is provided through the efforts of the wholly volunteer Fire Departments providing round-the-clock fire protection to the Town’s residents 365 days a year: Bedford Village Fire Department (www.bedfordfire.com); Bedford Hills Fire Department (www.bedfordhillsfd.org); and Katonah Fire Department (www.katonahfd.org). The Bedford Village Fire Department also provides an ambulance service while emergency ambulance service in Bedford Hills and Katonah is provided through the Katonah-Bedford Hills Volunteer Ambulance Corps (www.kbhvac.org). GARBAGE: Garbage pick up in the Town is by private carter. Call the Town Clerk’s office (666-4534) for a list of properly registered garbage companies to operate within the Town of Bedford. In addition, for those “seniors” (60+) we offer a Senior Refuse disposal program. The program allows for disposal of plastic bagged, non-recyclable refuse at the Town Recycling Center, Adams Street, Bedford Hills (241-2671), Tuesdays, Thursdays and Saturdays from 8am to 3pm. Coupons may be purchased at the Town Clerk’s Office, five coupons for $25.

LEAF PICK UP: The Public Works Department will pick up leaves year-round on properties of one acre or less. These materials must be placed for pickup out at curbside in biodegradable (i.e. paper) bags. Branches (smaller than 3” diameter or 3’ or less in length) bundled and tied will be picked up as well. Bundles and bags must not weigh more than 50lbs. Non-bio-degradable matter such as rocks, bricks, drywall, rubbish or dirt may not be placed in leaf bags. Residents who have bagged leaves or branches out for curbside pickup should notify the Public Works Department: 666-7669. Leaf pick up is accomplished on a first-come, first-servebasis. Residents are asked to keep in mind this service is provided as courtesy and other overriding priorities such as storms and scheduled large construction projects may impact the timeliness of curbside pickup.

The Public Works Department also picks up loose leaves piled and left at the curb from October 1 to November 15 during leaf season (at any other time of the year, leaves must be bagged). The goal of the Department of Public Works will be to visit each neighborhood on a bi-weekly basis. However, due to weather and other scheduling factors, it is difficult to predict the precise time the leaf pickup crew will visit a particular street. Residents may view the leaf pickup schedule posted during leaf season on the Town’s website’s What’s New page.

LIBRARIES: Each hamlet has its own library operated by a Board of Trustees. These libraries, associated with the Westchester Library System, have the ability to reach beyond their own walls by means of the County-wide automated circulation system, Westlynx.

The Bedford Hills Free Library (666-6472) first opened in 1915 in two rooms above a hamlet shoe store. The library moved to its present site, a 140-year-old building, at 26 Main Street in March, 1952.

For more than 100 years the Katonah Village Library (232-3508) has been serving this hamlet and is also home to the Katonah Historical Museum, founded in 1980 to preserve the hamlet’s history. The library boasts the area’s largest reference collection and an active Children’s Library.

The Bedford Village Library (234-3570), housed since 1903 in the former home of The Bedford Academy on the Village Green, traces its earliest beginnings to the Bedford Circulating Library.

MEALS ON WHEELS: Homebound residents unable to prepare meals and have no one to do so for him or her may be eligible for a hot midday meal. Call the Recreation Department at 666-7203 for more information.

MEDICAL SERVICES: Northern Westchester Hospital Center serves the health needs of northern Westchester offering a wide range of support and community services in addition to a modern hospital facility. There are several medical groups and many private physicians in our town and surrounding towns. Please consult your local phone book for names and addresses.

The District Nursing Association serves the region and is available to provide inhome services while ambulance service is provided on a volunteer basis throughthe Bedford Village Fire Department and the Katonah-Bedford Hills Ambulance Corps. in addition to a commercial service in Mount Kisco.

Counseling services are available through the Northern Westchester Guidance Clinic where teens are involved, and the Northern Westchester Shelter offers services in instances of family abuse. Four Winds Hospital is a psychiatric facility in Katonah, and the Westchester County Medical Center in Valhalla is within convenient driving distance.

PARKING: We have parking lots in each hamlet to facilitate shoppers, employees and commuters. Information on the permitted lots and metered daily parking is available at www.BedfordNY.gov/html/d_parking.html.

SCHOOLS: Bedford is served by three exceptional public school districts and several private schools. The largest public district is Bedford Central School District which also serves Pound Ridge and Mount Kisco. Byram Hills School District serves a small area in southeast Bedford and the Katonah-Lewisboro School District serves nearly all of Katonah. Both private and parochial schools are also available to Bedford residents.

SENIOR PROGRAMS: The Recreation and Parks Department offers a variety of programs for seniors. For information on program offerings and schedules, please call 914-666-7203 or check our website (www.BedfordNY.gov/html/recreation.html) for the latest Recreation brochure.

SNOW REMOVAL: The Public Works Department is responsible for plowing snow on all roads in the Town that are not owned by the State or County or that are Private Ways. On-street parking is prohibited in the Town from 11:00 pm to 7:00 am from November 15 through April 1 of each year. Snow Removal Policy for residents: No owner or occupant of any premises abutting any Town street shall throw, place or deposit any snow or ice into or on any such street, with the exception that the same may be deposited in the gutter (i.e. the area extending 3’ out from the edge of the road/curb), only in the event that there is no facility to deposit the same on the premises. It is against the law to throw or place snow from private property onto a roadway or to plow across the street. In general, in residentially zoned areas, the Town is responsible for snow and ice removal on sidewalks. In commercial areas, the owners and/or occupant of premises abutting and/or bordering on paved sidewalks along town streets shall remove all ice and/or snow from the sidewalks, or in the case of ice which may be so frozen, thoroughly cover it with sand, within twelve hours.

WHO TO CALL

Call the BUILDING DEPARTMENT if you plan to renovate or build an addition to your house, change the electrical or plumbing systems, install a fence or take down a tree. In many cases, you will need a permit – better to be safe than sorry!

Call the CONSERVATION BOARD with questions about environmental constraints on your property. Does it have or adjoin steep slopes, swamps, streams? Will trees be clear cut? Is your land in the Critical Environmental Area? Aquifer Protection Zone? One hundred year Flood Zone? Ask to see the Natural Resources Index Maps and other Town studies that may include your property.

Call the HIGHWAY DEPARTMENT if you are thinking of putting in a new driveway, building a new fence or stonewall along a Town right of way, or putting in a new driveway with a new curb cut on a public road.

Call the HISTORIC DISTRICT COMMISSION if you live in the Bedford Village or Katonah Historic Districts, before you make plans to change the appearance of your home or your property.

Call the PLANNING BOARD if you are considering subdivision of your property, an accessory apartment or any change of use of a commercial building.

Call the TOWN CLERK if you need a dog license, dog park permit, marriage license, hunting license, fishing license, or need to register to vote or are unsure who or where to call. We will try our best to steer you in the right direction. We provide copies of all ordinances in the Town Code as well as maps of our Town, biking trails and information for resources throughout Westchester County.

Call the WETLANDS CONTROL COMMISSION if your property contains wetland, moving water or adjoins a wetland and you are considering any physical changes within 100’ of these areas.

TOWN OFFICES TELEPHONE DIRECTORY Department Number Contact Department Number Contact Alarms 666-7273 Alex O’Connor Police Non-Emergency 241-3111 Chief Bill Hayes Assessor 666-5149 Harry Girdlestone Police Emergency – Call 911 Building Dept 666-8040 Steve Fraietta Public Works 666-7669 Kevin Winn Conservation Board 666-4434 Simon Skolnik Receiver of Taxes 666-4475 Amy Pectol Court Clerk 666-6965 Nancy Artese Recreation Dept 666-7004 Bill Heidepriem Dog Control Officer 666-4855 Ray Teetsel Recycling Center 241-2671 Drug Abuse Prevention 234-3227 Patty Warble Senior Citizen Line 666-7203 Jim Whiting Finance Office 666-8283 Edward Ritter Supervisor 666-6530 Chris Burdick Highway Dept 666-7669 Foreman: Andy Rosafort Town Clerk 666-4534 Boo Fumagalli Historian 666-4745 John Stockbridge Water Dept 666-7855 Bill Nickson Parking Permits & Meters 666-8097 Jacqueline Johnson Wetlands Control Comm 666-5140 Andrew Messinger Personnel Office 864-0045 Joan Gallagher Planning 666-4434 Jeffrey Osterman Zoning Board of Appeals 666-4585 Peter Michaelis Planning Board 666-4434 Deirdre Courtney-Batson Additional Important Telephone Numbers: Bedford Central School District 241-6000 Bedford Hills Fire Department 666-8253 Bedford Hills Library 666-6472 Bedford Village Fire Department 234-3133 Bedford Village Library 234-3570 Katonah-Bedford Hills Ambulance C 232-5872 Katonah-Lewisboro School District 763-7000 Katonah Fire Department 232-4570 Katonah Village Library 232-3508

LOCAL, COUNTY, STATE AND FEDERAL GOVERNMENT SUPERVISOR Chris Burdick Two year term ending 12/31/15 Supervisor@BedfordNY.gov 914-666-6530 / FAX: 914-666-5249 TOWN BOARD Francis T. Corcoran Town Board Member Term ending 12/31/17 FCorcoran@BedfordNY.gov David Gabrielson Town Board Member Term ending 12/31/15 DGabrielson@BedfordNY.gov Mary Beth Kass Town Board Member Term ending 12/31/17 EVKass@Optonline.net Town Clerk Lisbeth (Boo) Fumagalli Term ending 12/31/17 321 Bedford Road TownClerk@BedfordNY.gov 914-666-4534 / FAX: 914-666-5249 Town Justices Court@BedfordNY.gov 914-666-6965 / Fax: 914-666-2490 Erik Jacobsen David Menken Term ending 12/31/17 Term ending 12/13/16 Westchester County Clerk Timothy C. Idoni 110 Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. Blvd White Plains, NY 10601 914-995-3080 cclerk@westchestergov.com Executive Robert P. Astorino 148 Martine Avenue White Plains, NY 10601-3327 914-995-2900 ce@westchestergov.com Legislator – 2nd District Peter Harckham (D) West. County Building 148 Martine Ave. White Plains, NY 10601 914-995-2810 Harckham@westchesterlegislators.com New York State Senate – 37th District George S. Latimer (D) 222 Grace Church Street, Suite 300 Port Chester, NY 10573 914-934-5250 latimer@nysenate.gov New York State Assembly – 93rd District David Buchwald (D) 125-131 East Main Street, Suite 204 Mt. Kisco, NY 10549 914-244-4450 buchwaldd@assembly.state.ny.us United States Senate Kirsten E. Gillibrand (D) 531 Dirksen Senate Office Building Washington DC 20510 202-224-4451 http://gillibrand.senate.gov/contact/ United States Senate Charles E. Schumer (D-IN-L) 757 Third Ave., Rm. 17-02 New York, NY 10017 212-486-4430 senator@schumer.senate.gov United States House of Representatives 18th Congressional District Sean P. Maloney (D) 123 Grand Street Newburgh, NY 12550 845-561-1259 https://seanmaloney.house.gov/contact/email-me

According to Bedford’s town clerk Lisbeth “Boo” Fumagalli, by law, owners of wild animals are required to report them every year. The law states that each person owning, possessing or harboring a wild animal must report its presence to the town clerk’s office by the end of April.

https://vimeo.com/156979790

Cortlandt Town Clerk – Joann Dyckman – 5 Stars

Image = Town Clerk Joann Dyckman 623

Joann Dyckman

1. Freedom Of Information Compliance And Knowledge Ratings

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To date Joann Dyckman has been given two difficult FOI requests all were responded to a delivered in 60 hours or less.

Ms. Dyckman Clearly has one of the most informative Town Clerk Webpages in Westchester County.

The Cortlandt Clerks office is professionally run with a consumer friendly approach that serves the town residents well.

With nearly two decades of responsive service using bold public access initiatives. She has set on of the highest standards in Records management techniques in Westchester County by moving to automated records retention, instantly scanning and transmitting electronically, transcribe minutes using streaming video.

Clearly Ms.Dyckman is a dependable and proven full-time public service to clearly understands New York States freedom of Information Laws and the need for accountability and transparency in local government.

If we could we would give Ms. Dyckman’s Office six stars, but our FOI Compliance Scale only goes to five stars.

But we are holding two thumbs up as we announce that JoannDyckman is one of Westchester’s 5 Star Clerks.

image = Two-thumbs-up_6263

Ms. Dyckman’s other civic service activities include:

Cortlandt Waterfront Preservation Committee
Cortlandt Advanced Life Support Committee
Committee for Respect & Toleration

2. Email Address To Submit A FOI Request 

joannd@townofcortlandt.com

3.Street Address To Submit An FOI Request 

Town Clerk’s Office
Town of Cortlandt
1 Heady Street
Cortlandt Manor, NY 10567

4. Experience:

Jo-Ann Dyckman is proud to be serving her 15th year as Cortlandt’s Town Clerk after being elected to three, four year terms.

Prior to running for public office Jo-Ann was publisher for many years of the local newspaper the “Cortlandt Observer”. It was during those years, reporting the local news, that she realized her desire to serve the people of Cortlandt in a different capacity.

Public service comes in many forms and Jo-Ann has a strong background of leadership and advocacy involved in many community related organizations and volunteer roles. Starting at the age of 14 as a candy striper at the Hudson Valley Hospital Center, her dedication has spanned decades and includes serving on the Committee for Respect and Tolerance (HHHS); the Cortlandt Advanced Life Support (Paramedic) Committee; past President of the Verplanck Residents’ Association; and the Cortlandt Waterfront Preservation Committee. She currently volunteers time as a Town Hall campus gardener and is particularly proud the renovation that the Town Hall Courtyard has undergone as this area is used several times throughout the year including Memorial Day to honor our Veterans. Jo-Ann was involved with the development of the Cortlandt Technology Committee and the Green Team at Town Hall. This new “Green Team” initiative includes a plan to reduce Cortlandt’s consumption of energy by 25%.

Since taking office in 1998 Jo-Ann has spearheaded a series of bold initiatives in the Town Clerk’s Office to update the technology and incorporate modern management techniques in the day-to-day operations. Major accomplishments include:

Ø      moving to automated records retention and the use of several software programs to allow for instant retrieval for vital statistics, licenses and permits.

Ø      Working closely with the Town IT department she now scans and electronically transmits vital information packets to Town Board members and department heads saving many hundreds of pages in paper

Ø      Transcribes minutes using streaming video.

Ø      Implemented the Laserfiche program which allows practically instant retrieval of documents dating back decades.

“When I was first elected to the position of Town Clerk 15 years ago my office staff typically used a process server, copy machine, fax and phone and even an antiquated typewriter.  By implementing an innovative and proactive approach over many years, a typical day now includes the use of up to date computers with high speed internet access, scanned documents, e-mail with attachments, the electronic transfer of funds,  web pages and several software programs that allow for almost instant retrieval of documents dating back for decades, and efficient tracking of vital statistics.”

Responsibilities of the Town Clerk span a wide spectrum that includes assisting with the preparation of the Town Board business agendas, resolutions, local laws and ordinances with detailed and time sensitive follow-up; execution of hundreds of Town Board authorized contracts and agreements; preparation of all Town Board and Public Hearing minutes; maintaining required securities; issuance of various licenses and permits in accordance with Town and New York State law; and all Town records retention.

Jo-Ann Dyckman serves as the Registrar of Vital Statistics and issues all birth, death and marriage certificates in the Town of Cortlandt. She is the local election liaison for Westchester County and Town Freedom of Information Officer. “It is vital that the Town Clerk utilize the power of her office to create a climate conducive to progressive planning, productive problem solving and effective, efficient public service for all citizens.”

Jo-Ann is a lifelong area resident and has made the Town of Cortlandt her home for the last 35 years. She is the proud mother of Wendy, 29, a graduate of Hendrick Hudson High School and the University of Massachusetts, currently working for a large law firm in Boston; and Sarah, 23, also a graduate of Hendrick Hudson High School, currently working in Tarrytown as a Certified Medical Assistant.

5. From The Town Of Cortlandt Website:

Image = town-of-cortlandt-seal 626

Welcome Town of Cortlandt Town Clerk Joann Dyckman

The office of the Town Clerk is the hub around which Town business revolves. The Town Clerk, elected every four years, is the Records Management Officer of the Town. Custodian of all the records, the Clerk is responsible for active files, disposition of inactive records and protection of the archives. As Secretary to the Town Board, the Clerk is responsible for preparing and maintaining the minutes of Town Board meetings. Freedom of Information Law (FOIL) requests are administered by this office.   The Clerk of Cortlandt also serves as the Registrar of Vital Statistics.

Please note Cortlandt is proud to now offer their Town Board, Zoning Board and Planning Board meeting videos streaming online.  Please visit our main homepage and scroll down to “Now Streaming” to view latest content.

Birth Certificates   

All birth certificates are filed with the Commissioner of Health of New York State. Your birth certificate is also on file in the clerk’s office of the municipality where you were born.

Requirements for Certified Copies of Birth Certificates:

  1. Birth Certificates can only be obtained by persons born within the Town of Cortlandt provided they are 18 years of age or older;  their parents or legal guardian can obtain their certificate.
  2. They can be obtained in person with identification (Driver’s License), or by mail.IF applying in person:  You will need:a.  Exact change, money order, or personal checks (do not accept out of State checks) for $10 per copy payable to Town of Cortlandt.
    b.  Photo copy of Identification.
    c.  Person’s name, date or birth, parents names including
    mother’s maiden name.IF applying by MAIL – You will need:a.  Money order, or personal checks (do not accept out of State checks) for $10 per copy payable to Town of Cortlandt.
    b.  A Notarized letter stating the person’s name, date or birth, parents names including     mother’s maiden name.
    c.  The name and address of where to send the document.

    1. The mailing address is:                        Joann Dyckman
      Cortlandt Town Clerk
      1 Heady Street
      Cortlandt Manor , NY 10567
      A certified copy or certified transcript of a birth certificate may be issued only:

      1. To the person named on the birth certificate, if 18 years of age or older.
      2. To the parents of the person named on the birth certificate.
      3. To a lawful representative of the person named or the parents of the person named on the birth certificate.
      4. To the Commissioner of Health.
      5. To a person with a New York State Court Order.
      6. To a municipal, state or federal agency for official purposes.

      There is charge of $10.00 per certified birth.

Death Certificates

Requirements for Certified Copies of Death Certificates:Death Certificates can only be obtained by:

1) Spouse, parent or child of the deceased.
2) A lawful representative of the spouse, parent or child of the deceased
3) Funeral Home
4) A person requiring the record for a documented legal right or claim.  This is established on the basis of documentation that the requestor has a legal need for the copy of the death certificate.
5) A municipal, state or federal agency when needed for official purposes.

They can be obtained in person with identification (Driver’s License), or by mail.

If requesting a death certificate by mail, the person must include:

a.  Money Order or personal checks (do not accept out of State checks)                                       $10 per copy payable to Town of Cortlandt

b.  Notarized Letter stating reason for request and relationship to person.

Please Note:  Death Certificate’s are not public record.

Elections  

The Town Clerk of Cortlandt is the local liaison with the Westchester County Board of Elections.  For more information please click the following links.

Polling Place Locator

Poll Worker Information

Board of Elections.

Freedom of Information Officer  

Freedom of Information Law (FOIL)New York State’s Freedom of Information Law (Public Officers Law §87 et. seq. ) allows members of the public to access records of governmental agencies. FOIL provides a process for the review and copying of an agency’s records.

Freedom of Information Law (FOIL) Requests

Freedom of Information Law requests for Town of Cortlandt records may be made by filling out a form and submitting it to the Town Clerk.

Once the form is completed you can either

Mail it to:

Joann Dyckman, Town Clerk

Town of Cortlandt

1 Heady St

Cortlandt Manor, NY 10567

OR sending via E-Mail joannd@townofcortlandt.com

Hunting & Fishing  

The Town Clerk’s office issues Hunting and Fishing Licenses on behalf of New York State.  The licenses which are issued are valid anywhere in New York State. Non-State Residents may also apply for NYS Hunting and Fishing Liceneses at a different fee schedule.

All applicants for Hunting and Fishing Licenses must comply with the regulation of the New York State Department of Environmental Conservation.  More details below.

For full information about Hunting and Fishing Licenses and the requirements of New York State – please visit:

NYS DEC

Marriage Licenses  

 

Marriage License Information
Town Clerk
Registrar’s Office
1 Heady St
Cortlandt Manor, NY 10567
Monday to Friday 9:00 a.m. to 3:00 p.m., except on the last day of the month
when they are only issued from 9AM to 10 AM 

(914) 734-1020A couple who intends to be married in New York State must apply in person for a marriage license to any town or city clerk in the State. The application for a license must be sworn and signed in the presence of the issuing clerk by both the bride and groom.A representative cannot apply for the license on behalf of the bride or groom. This applies even if the representative has been given the Power of Attorney. Notarized marriage license affidavits signed by the bride or groom cannot be substituted for their personal appearance.All applicants must bring valid forms of identification when applying for a marriage license. Expired forms of identification will not be accepted.

 

2 Forms of Identification are necessary,
one from each column per person.

Column 1

Column 2

Proof of age and identity:

* A Certified Record of Birth.* A Baptismal Record.* A Naturalization Record.
One current identification related
document with phot
 

* Valid, current U.S. Driver’s License or valid U.S. non-driver’s license.* Valid Passport, non U.S. passports must have current VISA.* U.S. Military Identification.* Valid and unexpired Green Card.

 

Photocopies of the above documents will not be accepted
as proof of identity.

All foreign documents, not in English, require a certified translation.  Acceptable are those produced by consulates, embassies and universities.


Information regarding all previous marriages must be furnished in the application for a marriage license. This includes whether the applicants are divorced, whether the former spouse or spouses are living and, if so, when, where and against whom the divorce or divorces were granted. 
A certified copy of the last Decree of Divorce  with Official Seal or a Certificate of Dissolution of Marriage is required.  Divorce papers in a foreign language must be accompanied by a certified translation. If widow or widower, a certified copy of death certificate must be presented.
$40.00 fee must be paid in exact change or money order, personal checks (do not accept out of State checks). Fees are set by the State of New York and may be changed at any time.

A marriage license is valid for 60 days, beginning 24 hours after issuance.

Age Requirements:
If either applicant is under 14 years of age, a marriage license cannot be issued.
If either applicant is 14 or 15 years of age, such applicant’s must present the written consent of both parents and a justice of the Supreme Court or a judge of the Family Court having jurisdiction over the town or city in which the application is made. If either applicant is 16 or 17 years of age, such applicant(s) must present the written consent of both parents.
If both applicants are 18 years of age or older, no consents are required.

No premarital examination or blood test is required to obtain a marriage license in New York State.

To visit our Downloadable Forms Page CLICK HERE

Town Code Book  

The Town Clerk is responsible for all updates to the Town Code Book.  The current version of the Town Code Book is available via link to General Code Publishers.

Town of Cortlandt Code Book

Clerk Permits, Certificates, Licenses 

The Town Clerk issues State licenses such as marriage, hunting and fishing, games of chance, dog, bingo, peddlers and parade permits.  The Town Clerk is the Registrar of Vital Statistics, issues and maintains all birth and death certificates and records in the Town and issues Marriage licenses.

You can hover your mouse over the left hand side menu under Town Clerk and click “Downloadable Forms” for more detailed application. Some of the most popular have direct links below.

Marriage Licenses

Death Certificates

Birth Certificates

Hunting and Fishing Licenses

6. Notes:

This Page Has Been Updated With New Information

About Cortlandt, New York

Image = Cortlandt_highlighted.svg

Cortlandt is a town in Westchester County, New York, United States. The population was 41,592 at the 2010 census. Cortlandt is located at the northwest edge of the county, at the eastern terminus of the Bear Mountain Bridge.

Commuter service to New York City is available via the Cortlandt train station and the Croton-Harmon train station, served by Metro-North Railroad.

U.S. Route 9 passes through the town along the Hudson River side.

The Bear Mountain Bridge Road and Toll House and Site of Old Croton Dam are listed on the National Register of Historic Places.

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cortlandt,_New_York

Elevation: 318′

 

Area: 50 mi²

 

Population: 41,592 (2010)
Unemployment rate: 4.1% (Apr 2015)

Lewisboro Town Clerk – Janet Donohue – 5 Stars

Image = Janet Donohue Lewisboro clerk

Janet Donahue

1. Freedom Of Information Compliance And Knowledge Ratings

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To date Ms. Donahue has been given some very difficult FOI requests all were responded to a delivered in 48 hours or less.

2. Experience:

Janet Donahue has served multiple terms as the Lewsboro Town Clerk.

Ms. Donahue was originally appointed by the town board upon the retirement of longtime Town Clerk Kathy Cory-Andreasen.

Previously, Ms. Donahue served four years as deputy town clerk.

Residents and professionals dealing with Lewisboro have come to rely on the Town Clerk for courteous, respectful, efficient service.

They have come to rely on the Clerk for many items, including prompt answers to questions, for prompt responses to document requests, and for confidential assistance with important personal matters.

Ms. Donahue’s responsibilities include attending all Town Board meetings and preparing the minutes in a timely manner, assisting in local elections and she is the liaison with the Board of Elections. She also issues licenses and permits for peddling and soliciting, collection of refuse, marriage licenses, dog licenses, cabaret licenses, accessible parking permits, hunting and fishing licenses, alcoholic consumption in public permits.

Ms. Donahue earned her five star rating for her duties as the Records Management Officer who maintains all records of the Town of Lewisboro>

As the Records Access Officer, she responds to all requests under the Freedom of Information Laws.

As the Registrar of Vital Statistics her office maintains records for all birth and deaths which occur in Town. Ms. Donahue also sells cemetery plots in the South Salem Cemetery and coordinates burials.

Moreover, she handles dog complaints and the Dog Control Officer works under my jurisdiction and her office designed and maintains the town’s website.

Lastly, this hardworking clerk provides Notary Public services and she is an E-Z Pass retailer for town residents.  In our opinion the residents of Lewisboro are well served by Ms. Donahue.
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3. Email Address To Submit A FOI Request

townclerk@lewisborogov.com

4.Street Address To Submit An FOI Request

Town Clerk
11 Main Street
P.O. Box 500
South Salem, NY 10590

5. From The Town Of Lewisboro Website:

Image = Lewisboro_highlighted.svg

Janet Donohue
Town Clerk

Jennifer Caviola
Deputy Town Clerk/
Webmaster

Responsibilities

  • attends and prepares minutes of all Town Board meetings. Minutes of all other Town of Lewisboro boards and committees are filed with the Town Clerk.
  • as Records Management Officer maintains all records of the Town and as Records Access Officer responds to all requests under Freedom of Information Laws.
  • as Registrar of Vital Statistics maintains records for all birth and deaths which occur in Town, issues marriage licenses, and maintains genealogical records of births, deaths and marriages.
  • assists in local elections and is the liaison with the Board of Elections.
  • issues licenses and permits for peddling and soliciting, video games, collection of refuse, bingo, alcoholic consumption in public places, accessible parking permits, the use of community houses, hunting and fishing licenses, movie and commercial filming and dog licenses.
  • approves all bills submitted for payment to the Town of Lewisboro.
  • sells cemetery plots in the South Salem, Beck Hill and Reynolds Cemetery.
  • handles dog complaints and the Dog Control Officer works under the jurisdiction of the Town Clerk.
  • is a Notary Public.  Please call 763-3511 to make sure the Notary is in.
  • designed and maintains the town’s website
  • yearly fee schedule.
  • do not knock registry form.
  • E-Z Pass retailer

9:00 am to 5:00 pm
Phone: 914-763-3511
Fax: 914-763-3678

Directory

Position Phone Email
Janet Donohue Town Clerk 914-763-3511 Email(link sends e-mail)
Jennifer Caviola Deputy Town Clerk & Webmaster 914-763-3511 Email

 6. Media Reports

PATCH: Janet Lee Donohue, Rep. Candidate for Town Clerk of Lewisboro

Prior to being unanimously appointed Town Clerk, Lee Donohue served as Deputy Town Clerk/Webmaster.

General Information

Name : Ms. Janet Lee Donohue
Age : 51
Place of residence : Town of Lewisboro

Education College

Attended college : Yes
College : Brockport State College
Degree : B.S. in Business Administration
Year of graduation : 1985……

Please Read More Here:

http://patch.com/new-york/bedford/janet-lee-donohue-rep-candidate-for-town-clerk-of-lewisboro

DAILY VOICE – Letter: Vote Donohue For Lewisboro Town Clerk 

To the Editor:

I wanted to add my voice to the chorus endorsing Janet Donohue for Lewisboro town clerk. I’ve known Janet as a friend and neighbor for more than a decade, as our daughters are good friends and Janet was their Girl Scout troop co-leader for several years.

I’ve also had the extremely pleasant and seamless experience of seeking Janet’s help at Town Hall, first as a witness to my will and, more recently, as the official who shepherded my husband’s and my marriage license through the right channels. We specifically drove three hours from Massachusetts so that we could register our marriage in Lewisboro with Janet. We wanted it done right by someone we trusted.

I’m well aware that not all visits to Town Hall are so happy, and that’s precisely why Janet was former Town Clerk Kathy Cory’s obvious choice. She is genuine, compassionate, discreet and incredibly organized. Those are precisely the qualities you want behind the counter when you go to Town Hall to attend to a sensitive and important matter.

As town clerk, you can’t misplace or even mis-order documents. You have to demonstrate incredible attention to detail, adhere to firm deadlines and keep multiple plates in the air at all times, or constituents can suffer real harm. You want someone who dots every “i” and crosses every “t” on your behalf, because she understands how much it matters, and that’s Janet Donohue. So, I encourage you to cast a vote for continuity and elect Janet Donohue on Nov. 6.

Tara A. OwenSouth Salem

http://lewisboro.dailyvoice.com/neighbors/letter-vote-donohue-for-lewisboro-town-clerk/535160/

DAILY VOICE: Donohue Ready to Take Over as Lewisboro Town Clerk

After nearly 30 years, Lewisboro residents who come to the Town House will find a new, yet familiar, face behind the town clerk’s desk.

Following Kathy Cory’s announcement last month that she would be retiring from her post as town clerk at the end of March, the town board unanimously voted to appoint Deputy Town Clerk Janet Donohue to fill the position.

“I’ve got some really big shoes to fill,” Donohue said of Cory. “She’s been my boss, my mentor and my friend. But I’ve had awesome training from someone who was the New York State Town Clerk of the Year, so I feel ready.”

Donohue has served as deputy town clerk for the past four years. She grew up in Rochester, N.Y. and moved to Lewisboro 15 years ago and got married. In fact, Cory officiated at her wedding.

While living upstate, Donohue was a custom service manager for Wegmans supermarket chain for 14 years. When she moved to Westchester County, she took a job with Searle Pharmaceuticals in Stamford, Conn., before taking time off to raise her two daughters. She then worked for a medical education company in White Plains before learning of the opening the town had for a deputy town clerk.

“I learned that Florence Furdyna was retiring and I thought I’d throw my hat in the ring,” Donohue said. “I e-mailed my resume to Kathy at midnight and she got back to me the very next day and I went in for an interview. She told me she liked my customer service background, which is a big part of this job.”

Donahue has been married for 15 years to her husband Ken and has two daughters, Jenna, who is in the fifth grade, and Lauren who is in the seventh grade…..

Please Read More Here:

http://lewisboro.dailyvoice.com/news/donohue-ready-to-take-over-as-lewisboro-town-clerk/470073/

LEWISBORO LEDGER: Board favors town clerk’s budget

Town Board members had a positive reaction to the preliminary 2015 departmental budget presented Monday night by Town Clerk Janet Donohue.

“Janet’s budget seems like it is going to come in pretty flat, which is a good thing,” said Deputy Supervisor Peter DeLucia.

The town clerk’s office brings in a myriad of fees both small and substantial from different areas, and Ms. Donohue said these would be holding steady in some areas and going up in others, including sale of cemetery lots.

She said her deputy town clerk, Jennifer Caviola, had done an outstanding job with dog licenses, providing residents with better tools for making sure their dogs are “legal.”……

Please Read More Here:

http://www.lewisboroledger.com/14813/board-favors-town-clerks-budget/

LEWISBORO LEDGER: Town tightens leash on dogs

Alerted by a recent spate of dog-biting incidents, town officials have taken steps to tighten leash and licensing laws, and to require a special permit for a local dog trainer who has been holding group and individual classes on town property without official authorization for the past 20 years.

The matters were first discussed two weeks ago with town prosecutor Greg Monteleone, who said he had been placed in a difficult position because of recent dog bite activity and needed more restrictive laws on the books.

Licenses and leashes

In New York State all dogs must be licensed. In Lewisboro the charge is $10 per year for neutered animals and $18 for un-neutered.

Town Clerk Janet Donohue sends out a renewal reminder letter 45 days before the annual license fee is due. If there is no response, she sends a second reminder in 30 days, warning of a penalty……

Please Read More Here:

http://www.lewisboroledger.com/13024/town-tightens-leash-on-dogs/

LEWISBORO LEDGER: Expanded recycling grows in popularity

…The Ledger sat down with Lewisboro Town Clerk Janet Donohue last week to discuss the recycling center and what it now offers to town residents.

“The town recycling center has been in operation since 1975,” Ms. Donohue said. “It closed after a few years and then reopened in 1991 and stayed open until Town Supervisor Edward Brancati shut it down due to the town’s budget crisis in 2008. His successor, Charles Duffy, reopened it in 2010.”

Prior to the addition of the new electronic waste recycling component in mid-April of this year, the center accepted plastics No. 1 through No. 7, light household metals, broken-down cardboard, and newspapers and magazines.

“All of these items still come in every week,” Ms. Donohue said, “but it is the electronic waste disposal that has really caught on.”

Items accepted through the E-Waste Alliance Network, of which Lewisboro is now a part, include a host of electronic items. They include answering machines, calculators, CD/DVD players, chargers, circuit boards, computers and laptops, copiers, fax machines, digital cameras, GPS units, inkjet cartridges, and microwaves.

Also, keyboards and mice, monitors, network equipment, paper shredders, radios and turntables, routers, scanners, servers, speakers, telecom equipment, televisions, terminals, universal power suppliers, video game systems, and wiring and cabling.

Responsible disposal

“There is no need to make an appointment to drop items off at the center on Saturday mornings, and we have one or two strong young men on board to unload residents’ cars,” Ms. Donohue said.

There are no restrictions on the number of items that may be dropped off at one time. The only caveat is keeping to the 100-pound weight limit, which leaves out large appliances.

Ms. Donohue said that large items like computer monitors and TVs are individually wrapped in special containers for pickup and everything is put into a 20- by 20-foot e-waste Dumpster supplied by Regional Computer Recycling and Recovery.

“All waste is organized by category before being picked up and taken away,” Ms. Donohue said.

According to Regional Computer Recycling & Recovery, the company conscientiously subscribes to the “Three Rs.” This involves reuse of equipment whenever possible; reduction of waste through advanced sorting, processing, and tracking systems; and environmentally sound recycling practices. The vast majority of equipment is disassembled and recycled on a materials basis.E-waste needs to be recycled because computers and other electronics contain hazardous waste elements. Even the cases of some electronic devices may be coated with toxic substances to prevent them from catching on fire or melting during use.

Residents love it

Ms. Donohue said the electronic waste disposal program has given a big boost to activity at the recycling center.

“Town residents have told me they are thrilled with this service and it has inspired them to do home cleanups,” she said. “Now is a great time of the year to look through your basement, garage and attic and see what you might want to dispose of. We anticipate a steady stream of customers over the rest of the spring and summer.”

Ms. Donohue said she sees the e-waste program as a great benefit to Lewisboro residents. “It’s completely free and I hope as many residents as possible will take advantage of this great service,” she said…..

Please Read More Here:

http://www.lewisboroledger.com/5604/expanded-recycling-grows-in-popularity/

PRESS RELEASE: Lewisboro Democrats and Republicans jointly endorse local slate

The Lewisboro Republican Town Committee and the Lewisboro Democratic Committee have come to an agreement to cross-endorse six incumbents running for re-election in 2015: Town Supervisor Peter Parsons, Town Board members Dan Welsh and John Pappalardo, Town Clerk Janet Donohue, Highway Superintendent Peter Ripperger, and Town Justice Susan Simon.

This unusual agreement is motivated by the shared view that the current town government has worked well together for the good of the town. For example, the Board voted unanimously to make Lewisboro the first town in New York State to adopt a “Community Choice Aggregation” ordinance, designed to provide lower electricity rates for Lewisboro residents. This option was recently authorized by the state.

Lewisboro was also the first town in the region to take advantage of the Cornell Local Roads Program, in which an engineer spent the summer assessing town roads and devising a 20-year plan for their maintenance. Now, with the plan endangered by the effects of two successive, brutal winters on town roads, the Town Board has once again come together to pass a bond anticipation note for $600,000 to allow our Highway Department to at least perform emergency repairs on our roads.

“Sometimes local issues transcend national politics,” said Supervisor Parsons, “and addressing the crisis with our Lewisboro roads is just one of those issues. Our current Town Board is working well together and we hope to continue making progress for the benefit of all residents of Lewisboro.”

It is because the Board has worked well together in these and other areas, all while keeping a careful eye on town finances, that both Committees felt the entire Board should receive their endorsement. In addition, both Committees feel the Town Clerk, Highway, and Justice Court departments are functioning smoothly and the incumbents deserve re-election.

From Christina Rae and Alan Cole, Co-Chairs of the Lewisboro Democratic Committee, and Andrea Rendo and Robert Sullivan, Chair and Vice-Chair of the Lewisboro Republican Town Committee.

http://www.lewisborodemocrats.org/jointpressrelease2015.html

JOURNAL NEWS: Lewisboro town candidates cross-endorsed

Lewisboro’s Democratic and Republican committees will cross endorse the six candidates up for re-election to town government in the November elections, according to party leaders.

Supervisor Peter Parsons and town Councilman Dan Welsh, previously backed by the Democratic Party, will be cross-endorsed along with Republican candidates Councilman  John Pappalardo and Town Clerk Janet Donohue. Also cross-endorsed are Hiwghway Superintendent Peter Ripperger and town Judge Susan Simon.

In a statement, Parsons said, ‘Sometimes local issues transcend national politics…Our current Town Board is working well together and we hope to continue making progress for the benefit of all residents of Lewisboro.”

The parties will not cross-endorse candidates in county elections.

http://www.lohud.com/story/news/politics/politics-on-the-hudson/2015/04/13/lewisboro-town-candidates-cross-endorsed/25738725/

HAMLET HUB: Lewisboro Inauguartaion Ceremony to take place January 1st

TOWN OF LEWISBORO – Inauguration Ceremony – Lewisboro Library

January 1, 2016 11:30 AM

Invocation – Reverend Dr. Chip Andrus from South Salem Presbyterian Church

Marc A. Seedorf, Town Justice, Town of Lewisboro, administers the oath of office to:

5. Related Pages

Facebook – Janet Donohue for Town Clerk

https://www.facebook.com/JanetDonohueForTownClerk/

LinkedIn:

https://www.linkedin.com/in/janet-donohue-90928656

Twitter: 

https://twitter.com/janetdonohue1

Lewisboro Republican Town Committee

http://westchestergop.com/go-local/town-committees/lewisboro-republican-town-committee/

6. Notes:

Page Has Been Updated With New Information

More About Lewisboro, New York

Lewisboro is a town in Westchester County, New York, United States. The population was 12,411 at the 2010 census. The town is named after John Lewis, an early settler.

After purchasing land from the local natives, the first settlers established themselves around South Salem. The town was formed as “Salem” in 1747. By 1790 the town assumed its current dimensions as lands were removed for other towns. The name changed to South Salem in 1806. John Lewis, a financier, requested that the town be given his name and established a fund for the town, though he did not follow through on his promise of a railroad link. Lewisboro is noted for its elaborate gardens, most notable in its public traffic triangles. Dry-stone walls and elegant Colonial mansions are other dominant features.

Lewisboro has had two noteworthy historical characters. Sarah Bishop was the hermit of West Mountain. Apparently mistreated by British soldiers at the time of the Revolutionary War, she retreated to a solitary life in the Lewisboro area. A spot known as “Sarah Bishop’s Cave” is on the hill on the north side of Lake Rippowam, near Mountain Lakes Camp.

The second historical character appeared around the time of the Civil War. The Leatherman was a wanderer who got his name from homemade leather garments. He is frequently mentioned as being in Lewisboro in the middle of the 19th century. He followed a route past homes that would offer him a meal and reappeared at the same doorsteps for 25 years. One of the hiking destinations in Ward Pound Ridge is to the Leatherman’s cave, reportedly one of his more frequent homes.

In 1987 a 10k trail race called “The Leatherman’s Loop” was started to honor his legacy and continues every spring at the Ward Pound Ridge Reservation.

The Mead Memorial Chapel was listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 1999…..

Please Reas More Here:

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lewisboro,_New_York

Mt Pleasant Town Clerk – Patricia June Scova – 5 Stars

Image = Mt plesant Town Clerk Patricia Brennan ScovaImage =Pat June Scova Mt Pleasant

Patricia June Scova AKA Patricia Breenan Scova

1. Freedom Of Information Compliance And Knowledge Ratings:

Image = fivestars

Mt Pleasant Town Clerk Patricia June Scova provided all of the information that we requested within the prescribed times of New York’ Freedom Of information laws. We give her office a five star rating and feel that town residents are well served by her.

 

2. Email Address For Filing FOI Requests

pscova@mtpleasantny.com

3, Mailing Address For Filing FOI Requests

Town Clerk
One Town Hall Plaza
Valhalla, NY 10595

4. Experience And Background Information:

Volunteer Service: Secretary for “Great Hunger Memorial of Westchester County”; Board of Directors, Mt. Pleasant Italian American Association

Residence: Mt. Pleasant (Hawthorne)

5. From The Town Website:

Image = Town of Mount Pleasant NY

Duties & Responsibilities

The Town Clerk’s Office is responsible for issuance of licenses, including marriage, dog, hunting and fishing, birth and death certificates, commuter parking permits and handicapped parking permits. The Town Clerk is the Freedom of Information Officer and clerk for Town Board.The clerk serves for a two year term.Hours of Operation:

Monday – Friday 8:30am to 4:30pm

Phone:(914) 742-2312Fax:(914) 747-6172

Frequently Asked Questions

Name Title
Patricia June Scova Town Clerk

6. Media Reports

JOURNAL NEWS – Mount Pleasant: TV, movie fame will cost you

…The filming fees under the new law are $1,000 for an advertisement that is not profit-motivated, such as something done for community service; $2,500 for an advertisement that sells a product; and $5,000 for feature film/television/video…..

Mount Pleasant’s new law, which applies to public and private property, says someone making a movie, documentary, television program or commercial needs to apply for a license from the town clerk.

Clerk Patricia June Scova said the town had “Law and Order” come twice in the last year or so, “but we didn’t have anything on the books.” She said there’s been other filming near where Routes 117 and 448 meet. A house on Eastview Drive drew cameras as well. She and other officials, including the police chief, have gotten the necessary information, such as proof of insurance, when productions have come to town.

But having the permitting law “is an important step for the town,” Scova said. “We get calls all the time from scouts who are looking for buildings,” she said….

Please read more here:

http://www.lohud.com/story/news/local/westchester/2016/06/14/mount-pleasant-movie-tv-filming-fees/85687938/

7.. Notes

This Ratings Page Has Been Updated With Additional Information

About Mt. Pleasant, NY

Image = Mount_Pleasant_highlighted.svg

Mount Pleasant is a town in Westchester County, New York, in the United States. As of the 2010 census, the town population was 43,724.

The villages of Valhalla, Hawthorne, Thornwood, Pleasantville, Sleepy Hollow and a small portion of Briarcliff Manor lie within the town,[a] as well as a number of hamlets.

The John D. Rockefeller Estate was added to the National Register of Historic Places in 1976 as a National Historic Landmark.

Please Read More Here:

Elevation: 249′

 

Population: 43,724 (2010)

 

Unemployment rate: 4.0% (Apr 2015)

North Castle Town Clerk – Alison Simon – 5 Stars

Image = North Castle town_clerk_alison_simon 626

Alison Simon, Town Clerk

1. Freedom Of Information Compliance And Knowledge Ratings:

Image = fivestars

Our Freedom Of Information Requests for access to public documents were responded to and filled in three days by a very couteous and helpful Town Clerk’s Office in North Castle.

2. Email Address For Filing FOI Requests

townclerk@northcastleny.com

3, Mailing Address For Filing FOI Requests

Town Clerk
15 Bedford Road
Armonk, NY 10504

4. Experience:

Town of North Castle Communications Coordinator

March 2013 – Present

My position as Communications Coordinator for the Town of North Castle has provided me with the following:

  • Tools to communicate with the public on behalf of the Town Government. I have helped to update the Town’s website for ease of use and create the social media formats Facebook and Twitter. I have also updated the Wampus Park Bulletin Board for the posting of pertinent, timely events and information,
  • Insight into the role of Town Clerk, including an awareness of the Clerk’s overall function and day to day responsibilities,
  • A working awareness of how information is disseminated to Town residents,
  • Existing working relationships with the Town Supervisor and Board Members, Town Administrator, Planning Board Director, Recreation Supervisor, as well as the Deputy Town Clerk, Town Hall staff and many volunteer Board and Committee members,
  • Work on the North Castle Forward interactive website for communication between the Comprehensive Plan Steering Committee and Town residents has provided an increase in awareness of the diverse concerns of residents in North White Plains, Armonk and Banksville,
  • I am currently devising a strategy to create residential email lists for each of the three hamlets in an effort to insure residents receive pertinent information regarding their specific locations.

Law Degree and Experience

  • My degree and work in Law fromThe Benjamin N. Cardozo School of Law – JD, 1992 – has taught me the importance of adhering to existing procedure and protocol. I am able to understand complex legal issues, communicate on par with the Town Attorney and share these concepts in language understandable to all Town residents. My legal experience will enable me to understand procedures pertaining to local government and elections.

Communications Degree and Experience

  • My background and degree in Communications – Boston University, College of Communication – BS, 1988 – has enabled me to research, understand and clearly communicate important, relevant information to the public in an unbiased, concise manner,
  • Reporting on topics of local interest has provided knowledge and awareness of many facets of the community. I researched and wrote articles on such topics as Zero Waste Day, North Castle’s Budget and Finance Advisory Task Force, North Castle’s Sales Tax Receipts, The Hiring a Town Administrator and Road Work Repairs. I wrote features on local residents, Officer Frank and Charitable Foundations,
  • Most importantly, my experience and training as a journalist has taught me how to keep my personal opinion out of the reporting and communication of information, a tool clearly required in the position of Town Clerk.

Armonk Chamber of Commerce

September 2014 – Present

Working in membership development, communication and financial organization for the Armonk Chamber of Commerce has enabled me to build relationships with many business owners and learn their thoughts for the future development of our Town.

  • Working in membership development, coordination and communication and financial organization for the Armonk Chamber of Commerce has given me insight into many area businesses and has enabled me to build relationships with many business owners and learn their thoughts for the future development of our Town.

Personal Ties to the Community

  • My strong personal ties to the community stem from my 12 year residency and the fact that my husband David and I have raised four children in Byram Hills School District,
  • We have been members of the Town Pool and have watched the Armonk community grow into a flourishing locality complete with excellent restaurants and shops. We have participated in many of the local parades and memorials, each of which helps maintain our “Small Town” feel, and we have enjoyed our Town’s advocacy of the arts; from Library events to local theatre presentations and, of course, the annual Art Show,
  • I have maintained active ties in the community through my participation in the Byram Hills PTSA, Byram Hills Boosters and the Pre-School Association. I have been class parent, team parent and class room volunteer along with so many other community volunteers,
  • I have a vested interest in the future development of North Castle as I have seen the area grow grown and change since the 1960s. I was born and raised in Westchester County and attended Edgemont High School. I have fond memories of family trips to Armonk for “a day in the country” and a stop at Schultz’s Cider Mill for fresh donuts,
  • I care deeply about the future of North Castle and want to help guide the growth of our Town while helping to maintain it’s unique and distinct characteristics.

5. From The Town Website:

Welcome to the Town Clerk’s Office!

The Office of the Town Clerk, established in North Castle in 1736, is the gateway to government and the hub of the Town’s administrative system. The Clerk’s Office interacts with residents, professionals and all Town Departments with regard to actions before and directed by the Town Board.

Role of the Town Clerk:

  • Prepares and publishes Town Board agendas and supporting documentation. Submissions for Town Board agendas must be received by the Town Clerk by 12:00 noon on the Tuesday of the week preceeding the meeting. If the item is complex and requires study, it should be submitted well in advance of this deadline. Items may be deferred to a future meeting by the Town Supervisor.
  • Attends all Town Board meetings, records minutes and oversees video distribution of Town Board meetings, publishes legal notices, receives and opens bids for the purchase of Town materials, equipment and service providers.
  • Manages active and archival Town records and responds to Freedom of Information Law Requests (FOIL) and general inquiries. Maintains records of adopted Town laws, budgets, contracts, bonds, and deeds.
  • Improves communications and access to Town Government via the Town website, live and on-demand video streaming and e-communications. Improving the appearance and content of the Town website was a joint effort initiated by the Town Clerk and the Communications Committee. The Clerk’s Office managed the bidding, vendor review, coordination of the design and content development with Town Departments, Board and Committees.
  • Records and issues birth and death certificates for those who are born or die within the Town limits.
  • Issues licenses and permits.
  • Coordinates primary, general and special Town elections and referendums; acts as liaison to Westchester County Board of Elections.

Email Us.

The Communications Committee is an advisory committee appointed by the Town Board. The Committee works to improve communications concerning Town government, programs & services, and community events. The group is comprised of residents, Town Clerk Alison Simon and Technical Specialist Jon Rick.

The Committee is charged with:

  • Advising the Town Board concerning new technologies related to the Town website and other platforms of electronic messaging.
  • Managing technical matters and programming development for NCTV cablecasting and web streaming.
  • Increasing the presence and variety of communications throughout the community.

Meetings are usually held on the first Thursday of the month, 9:30am to 11:00am in Hergenhan Recreation Center.

Anyone with an interest in improving communications and promoting community resources and events is encouraged to submit a volunteer service application. For more information, contact Alison Simon at townclerk@northcastleny.com or (914) 273-3321.

Staff Contacts

Name Title Phone
Alison Simon Town Clerk (914) 273-3321
Barbara Pesquera Deputy Town Clerk & Deputy Registrar (914) 273-3321
Rita Ross Intermediate Clerk (914) 273-3321
Betty Sanchirico Senior Office Assistant (914) 273-3321

6. Media Reports

DAILY VOICE: New, Returning North Castle Officials Are Sworn In

North Castle town officials, both those beginning their time in municipal office and those who are returning, were sworn in on a chilly Monday evening before relatives and community members.

“We should be very happy that we have such high-quality people serving our community,” said Town Justice Douglas Martino, who administered the oaths of office.

The newest face to town government is Alison Simon, who was sworn in as town clerk. Simon, who ran unopposed on both the local Republican and Democratic tickets, succeeded Anne Curran.

Simon thanked her precedessor, who was seated in the audience, and described her as a mentor. She also noted that Curran presented her with a list showing every clerk in the town’s history since it was incorporated in 1736…..

Please Read More Here:

http://armonk.dailyvoice.com/news/new-returning-north-castle-officials-are-sworn-in/615741/

7. Related Pages:

LinkedIn:
https://www.linkedin.com/in/alison-simon-02a42235

7. Notes

This Ratings Page Has Been Updated With Additional Information

About North Castle, New York

North Castle is a town in Westchester County, New York, United States. The population was 11,841 at the 2010 census. It has no villages.
Population: 11,841 (2010)
Zip code: 10504

North Salem Town Clerk – Veronica “Ronnie” Howley – 5 Stars

Image = North Salem Town Clerk Veronica E. Howley 626
Veronica Howley

1. Freedom Of Information Compliance And Knowledge Ratings:

Image = fivestars

Popular and long time North Salem Town Clerk – Veronica “Ronnie” Howley and her assistant Patricia Butler successfully completed all Freedom Of Information requests used in the FOILNY.org compliance review and earned a five star rating their town.

Ms. Howley and her assistant Ms. Butler jobs include issuing permits, licenses, marriage, birth and death certificates, providing copies of documents and much, much more.

“There are no secrets here,”Ms. Howley often tells town taxpayers. “Practically everything is foilable.”

2. Email Address For Filing FOI Requests

vhowley@northsalemny.org

3, Mailing Address For Filing FOI Requests

Town Clerk
Delancey Hall
266 Titicus Road
North Salem, New York 10560

4. Experience:

First elected as town clerk in 1999 – Often runs unopposed in political deals with opposing party. Town clerk term is for four years and she ran uncontested for her fifth four year term in 2015. Many in the town complain about a lack of transparency in their local government.

Town Clerk’s Salary: $79,009 Plus Benefits And Retirement

City/Town of Residence: North Salem

Education: Graduated from North Salem High School in 1976

Prior Civic Service: Girl Scouts, Improvement Society, Lions Club

Married to Police Chief Thomas Howley

Political Contact Email Listed : Ronhow57@aol.com

5. From The Town Website:

The Town Clerk is responsible for keeping records of the Town Board meetings and all contracts and agreements the Town makes. The Clerk processes numerous licenses and permits and certificates of birth, marriage and death. She also serves as the Records Management Officer, acts as the Registrar of Vital Statistics and is in charge of running Local Elections. The Town Clerk is elected to a four-year term.

6. News Reports / Related Pages:

North Salem court clerk with cancer loses job months before retirement

NORTH SALEM – A Danbury woman who is battling cancer says she is shocked after losing her job as a court clerk in the town of North Salem.

Trish Rubino was just five months away from early retirement when she lost her job and her health benefits. She says it’s all due to a change in judges in North Salem.

Town officials told the single mother of three that she lost her job because new judges wanted to appoint their own court clerk.

“Between the judges and the supervisor and the town board, everyone knew what I was going through, and I think they could have been more compassionate and just kept me on the five months, given me my health insurance and that would have been the right thing to do,” she says.

News 12 reached out to North Salem Town Supervisor Warren Lucas, who said that he had been told by the town council that “because of HIPAA and the personal aspects of the issues raised,” he was not allowed to talk about the matter.

http://westchester.news12.com/news/north-salem-court-clerk-with-cancer-loses-job-months-before-retirement-1.11302583

Four Vie For Pair Of North Salem Council Seats

NORTH SALEM, N.Y. — Incumbent North Salem Town Board members Amy Rosmarin and Martin Aronchick are facing challengers Lisa Douglas and Brent Golisano in their re-election bids on Tuesday.

The incumbents, who are running on the Democratic ticket, are also running on a ballot line called Non Partisan. The challengers are running on the Republican ticket, along ballot lines for the Independence, Conservative, Reform and North Salem Local parties.

Incumbent Supervisor Warren Lucas, who is running unopposed, is also running on a ticket with Douglas and Golisano.

The quartet of council candidates recent appeared at a League of Women Voters forum, where they took questions on several issues. One was about how the candidates rate the state of the town…..

….“This is a special place,” Aronchick said about the town. Still, Aronchick expressed concern about quality of life issues, such as drug abuse and traffic.

Aronchick also touted his ability to work in a bipartisan way at the local level, citing an effort with Deputy Supervisor Peter Kamenstein to recruit Croton Falls merchants for planting new trees.

Douglas cited infrastructure, the MTA platform tax and speed on streets as local concerns. She also suggested that, as a way to save money on beautification efforts, high school students could help with the work as a way to earn community service credit for graduation…..

Please Read More Here:

http://northsalem.dailyvoice.com/news/four-vie-for-pair-of-north-salem-council-seats/600893/

PATCH: North Salem Court Clerk Loses Job, Health Insurance While Fighting Cancer

The Danbury, CT, resident was told of her job loss via email, just five months before early retirement.

Trish Rubino, a Danbury woman battling multiple myeloma, a type of blood cancer, was five months away from early retirement when she was told by the Town of North Salem that she lost her job as court clerk and her health benefits, according to Fox News.

One of her three daughters, Jessica Rubino, posted on Facebook that she was notified of her job loss via email three days before Christmas that her last day of work would be Dec. 31, 2015 and that she would be replaced by a new court clerk. She held the position for nearly 10 years before she was let go. Jessica wrote:

“While my sick mother was hoping to kickstart a fresh new year, after 2015 couldn’t have gotten worse, she starts 2016 being ‘released’ from her job while battling her health issue. To make this worse, she was given notice 3 days before Christmas in an email stating that her last day of work would be 12/31/15. She is being replaced by a new court clerk at the decision of the newly elected judges who are being inducted today at 1pm. She sits here at treatment speechless, disappointed, and hurt that the people she worked with for almost 10 years could allow this to happen only 5 months before she is eligible for early retirement, with her health benefits that she desperately needs. I cannot believe that anyone could make such a heartless decision. Shame on you, Town of North Salem.”

Multiple myeloma is a blood cancer that develops in the plasma cells found in bone marrow….

Please Read More Here:

http://patch.com/new-york/bedford/north-salem-court-clerk-loses-job-health-insurance-while-fighting-cancer

DAILY VOICE: Douglas Edges Aronchick By Just 3 Votes For North Salem Council Seat

NORTH SALEM, N.Y. — Republican challenger Lisa Douglas has defeated Democratic incumbent Councilman Martin Aronchick by just three votes, according to updated unofficial results from the Westchester County Board of Elections.

The new tallies show that Douglas received 646 votes while Aronchick got 643.

If the numbers hold up for when the official results as certified by the county board, then North Salem’s Republican slate will have swept the local races.

Fellow Republican challenger Brent Golisano easily won the other council seat by finishing first in the four-candidate field, receiving a total of 719 votes.

Amy Rosmarin, the other Democratic incumbent, was unseated and finished fourth with just 575 votes.

Under the elections structure, the top-two vote recipients out of the four candidates are the winners.

Meanwhile, in the race for a pair of open town justice seats, Republican candidates Stephen Bobolia and John Aronian have won with 725 and 760 votes, respectively. Democratic candidates Solomon Schepps and Robert Leder received respective vote totals of 609 and 433.

Republican incumbent Supervisor Warren Lucas, who ran unopposed, was re-elected and received 1,081 votes. Incumbent Town Clerk Veronica Howley, also a Republican candidate, ran without opposition and won with 1,068 votes.

Please Read More Here:

http://northsalem.dailyvoice.com/news/douglas-edges-aronchick-by-just-3-votes-for-north-salem-council-seat/605818/

North Salem Teachers Press For New Contract

Parents, teachers, alums and administrators spoke at the North Salem Board of Education (BOE) meeting  June  1, once again calling on the district to come to terms on a new contract agreement for the district’s 135 unionized teachers.  A mediation session is planned for this week.

The current teachers’ three-year contract expires on June 30. Talks reached an impasse in the past month and both sides agreed to bring in arbitrator Philip Maier to oversee the negotiations.

John  Vassak, a retired teacher whose sons attended North Salem schools, talked about how his son graduated Fordham University and went on to become a social studies teacher in a western suburb of Tampa, Florida. He said that 11 years, his son was one of several staff members who chose to leave because he could not support his family on the salary provided by the school district.  “I mention this,” he said, “Because I want North Salem to continue to be the quality it is and has been. We must retain the quality teaching staff we have and a contract that will enable us to attract quality teachers in the future.”

Please Read More Here:

https://www.tapinto.net/towns/north-salem/articles/north-salem-teachers-press-for-new-contract

LinkedIn;
https://www.linkedin.com/in/veronica-howley-22444a2a

7. Recent Town Political History:

In March Of 2009, North Salem Supervisor Paul Greenwood submitted his resignation Thursday, a week after he was arrested on fraud charges connected to his investment firm.

Greenwood and his business partner were arrested Feb. 25 by the FBI on federal fraud charges. According to investigators, the town supervisor swindled more than $500 million from investors.

Following his arrest, Greenwood was set free on $7 million bail, but his assets, including a 250-acre horse farm on the Putnam-Westchester border, have been frozen for possible use in restitution to victims of the alleged scheme.

Please Read More Here:

http://www.lohud.com/story/news/local/westchester/2014/12/03/paul-greenwood-sentenced-securities-fraud/19841599/

North Salem Resident Sentenced For Bribery

Forty-eight-year-old Anthony Bove of North Salem was sentenced Friday to 15 months in prison and ordered to pay restitutiion for accepting a $10,000 bribe.

Bove, the former Commissioner of the Board of Water Supply in the City of Mount Vernon, pled guilty in White Plains federal court on March 22 to soliciting the bribe and then lying to federal law enforcement officers during questioning.

U.S. Attorney for the Southern District of New York, Preet Bharara,  issued a statement following the sentencing saying, “While entrusted to provide clean and safe water for the people of Mount Vernon, Anthony Bove looked out only for himself, demanding a bribe from one of his own employees for a promotion to which the employee was already entitled.”

The water department is responsible for serving Mount Vernon city residents by monitoring and treating the city’s water supply, repairing water main leaks and reading water meters and generating water bills.

Prosecutors say in the spring of 2015, Bove solicited a the bribe from a Water Department employee in exchange for approving the employee’s promotion within the department. The employee, who was serving as the bookkeeper at the time, had passed a civil-service bookkeeping examination in order to become eligible for a permanent position within the department.

Bove did not approve the application, instead he told the employee on April 14, 2015 to meet him at Memorial Field in Mount Vernon where he explained he would not approve the worker’s promotion unless they came up with $10,000. He worked out a payment plan with the worker, saying he would accept $5,000 up front and then the remaining payments on an installment plan.

The worker was unable to make any payments and as a result the permanent bookkeeping position remained unapproved for months. Bove eventually lost his position when a new mayor was elected…..

Please Read More Here:

https://www.tapinto.net/towns/north-salem/articles/north-salem-resident-sentenced-for-bribery

7. Notes

This Ratings Page Has Been Updated With Additional Information

About North Salem, New York

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North Salem is a town in the northeast part of Westchester County, New York, United States. It is a suburb of New York City located approximately 50 miles north of Midtown Manhattan.

The county ranks second for wealthiest counties in New York State and the seventh wealthiest county nationally. The population of North Salem was 5,104 at the 2010 census.

In 2011, the average income for a household in the town was $157,258, with an average net worth of $1,300,058. The median house value in 2009 was $772,817. The per capita income for the town was $59,403. About 1.5% of families and 2.0% of the population were below the poverty line, including 2.2% of those under age 18 and none of those age 65 or over.

As of the census of 2000, there were 5,173 people, 1,764 households, and 1,374 families residing in the town. The population density was 241.5 people per square mile (93.2/km²). There were 1,979 housing units at an average density of 92.4 per square mile (35.7/km²). The racial makeup of the town was 95.44% White, 0.75%African American, 0.08% Native American, 0.97% Asian, 1.12% from other races, and 1.64% from two or more races. Hispanic or Latino of any race were 3.65% of the population.

There were 1,764 households out of which 39.2% had children under the age of 18 living with them, 68.1% weremarried couples living together, 7.5% had a female householder with no husband present, and 22.1% were non-families. 17.5% of all households were made up of individuals and 5.3% had someone living alone who was 65 years of age or older. The average household size was 2.80 and the average family size was 3.17.

In the town the population was spread out with 26.2% under the age of 18, 4.4% from 18 to 24, 28.5% from 25 to 44, 27.0% from 45 to 64, and 13.9% who were 65 years of age or older. The median age was 40 years. For every 100 females there were 91.6 males. For every 100 females age 18 and over, there were 87.4 males.

  • Croton Falls – a hamlet in the northwest corner of the town with its own Metro-North station
  • Grants Corner – a hamlet southeast of North Salem
  • North Salem – a hamlet in the west part of the town. The North Salem Town Hall was added to the National Register of Historic Places in 1980.
  • Salem Center – a hamlet at the east end of Titicus Reservoir. The fictitious headquarters of the X-Men Marvel Comics superhero team is located in Salem Center.
  • Purdys – a hamlet south of Croton Falls with its own Metro-North station. The Joseph Purdy Homestead was added to the National Register of Historic Places in 1973.
  • Twin Lakes Village – a hamlet on the south town line…..

Please Read More Here:

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/North_Salem,_New_York

 

Ossining Town Clerk – Mary Ann Roberts – 5 Stars

Image = Ossining Town Clerk - Mary Ann Roberts 625

Mary Ann Roberts

1. Freedom Of Information Compliance And Knowledge Ratings:

Ossining Town Clerk Mary Ann Roberts acknowledge all Freedom of Information requests and quickly process them even though the information we asked for was difficult to obtain. We rate Ms. Roberts with five stars. The citizens of Ossining are very well served by this Ms. Roberts.

2. Email Address For Filing FOI Requests

mroberts@townofossining.com

3, Mailing Address For Filing FOI Requests

Town Clerk
16 Croton Avenue
Ossining, NY 10562

4. Experience:

MaryAnn Roberts is Clerk to both the Village and the Town of Ossining.

Ms. Roberts has held the position of Town Clerk since taking office on January 1, 2000, as well as being appointed  Village Clerk for the same term.

Ms. Roberts was elected to her first four-year term in a two-way race in 1999.

Ms Robertshas has been a resident in the Village of Ossining nearly all of her life and is married with two grown children who have gone through the Ossining School System.

5. From The Town Website:

Office Hours are Monday – Friday, 8:30 am – 4:30 pm. The following services are available in the Town/Village Clerk’s Office.

Town of Ossining Schedule of Fees: schedule consists of a compilation and consolidation of provisions pertaining to fees for the various applications, licenses and permits required or provided for under the Town Code, rules and regulations.

pdf Schedule of Fees (39 KB)

Freedom of Information Request Form: application for public access to records.
pdf FOIL Request Form (40 KB)

  • Licensing:
    • Conservation (Hunting, Fishing)
    • Dog
    • Marriage
    • Games of Chance
    • Bingo
    • Peddler
    • Refreshment
    • Taxi Driver
    • Taxi Owner
    • Laundromat
    • Coin Operated Devices
    • Cabaret
    • “Going Out of Business”
  • Parking Permits:
    • Railroad Station Parking (Annual)
      – For Residents of Town of Ossining only
    • Municipal Lots
  • Birth Records:
    • Certifications of Birth Records from 1881 to present
  • Death Records:
    • Certifications of Death Records from 1881 to present

NYS Dept. of Health – Vital Records (Birth, Death, Marriage & Divorce Records)

7. Notes

This Ratings Page Has Been Updated With Additional Information

About Ossining, New York

Image = Ossining_(town)_highlighted.svg

Ossining is a town located along the Hudson River in Westchester County, New York, United States. The population was 37,674 in the 2010 census. It contains two villages, the Village of Ossining and part of Briarcliff Manor.

The rest is located in the Town of Mount Pleasant. It is the location of Sing Sing maximum-security prison.

Frederick Philipse bought the area which presently constitutes the Town of Ossining from the Sint Sinck Indians in 1685. The Sint Sinck were members of the Matinecock (Algonquin) tribe, who originally resided in the area of Cow Neck Peninsula on Long Island, New York. His Manor extended from Spuyten Duyvil Creek on the border between present day Manhattan and the Bronx to the Croton River. The last Lord of the Manor, Frederick Philipse III, was a Loyalist in the American Revolutionary War who fled to England. The State of New York confiscated the manor in 1779.

In 1813, the village of Sing Sing was incorporated. Sing Prison, now known as Sing Sing Correctional Facility, which is a maximum-security prison, opened in 1826. The prison was opened to replace the Newgate Prison that was located in New York City. In 1845, the New York State Legislature created a new town out of the northern part of what had been the Town of Mount Pleasant. A local Indian authority suggested the town be named Ossinsing, a different form of the name Sing Sing. One year later the last “s” was removed for ease in pronunciation. In 1881, the town considered changing its name to “Garfield Plains” to honor the recently assassinated President of the United States, James Garfield, but dropped the idea after the much larger city of White Plains in southern Westchester County objected. In 1901, to prevent confusion of goods made in the village with Sing Sing prison-made items, local officials had the village name changed to Ossining as well.

In 1902 an area east of the village of Ossining, then known as Whitson’s Crossing, was incorporated as the village of Briarcliff Manor.

The Jug Tavern and Scarborough Historic District are listed on the National Register of Historic Places…..

Please Read More here:

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ossining_(town),_New_York

Zip code: 10562
Population: 37,674 (2010)

Somers Town Clerk – Patricia Kalba – 5 Stars

Image = Patricia Kalba Sworn in 2016

Patricia Kalba Being sworn In January Of 2016

1. Freedom Of Information Compliance And Knowledge Ratings

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Patricia Kalba was given three Freedom Of Information requests that all were resounded to filled in less than four days time. We found the office to be responsive and courteous.

In her first bid for elected office, deputy Town Clerk Patricia Kalba has the support of both the Somers Republican and Democratic parties to succeed her boss, retiring Longtime Town Clerk Kathleen R. Pacella.

2. Email Address For Filing FOI Requests

pkalba@somersny.com

3, Mailing Address For Filing FOI Requests:

Town Clerk
335 Route 202
Somers, NY 10589

4. Experience:

Patricia Kalb was Somers Deputy Town Clerk for over a decade.Born and raised in Somers,

Ms. Kalba is a graduate of Somers High School who went on to earn her associate’s degree from Mercy College. In addition to her years in the town clerk’s office, Kalba has held a number of private-sector jobs

5. From The Town Of Somers Website:

Image = Somers_highlighted.svg

Contact:
Town Clerk
Deputy Town Clerk
Address:

335 Route 202

Somers, NY 10589

Phone:
914-277-3323
Fax:
914-277-3960
Hours:
Mon – Fri, 9:00am to 4:30pm
Additional Links:
6. Notes

This Ratings Page Has Been Updated With Additional Information

About Somers, New York

Somers is a town located in northeastern Westchester County, New York, United States. As of the 2010 census, the town had a population of 20,434.

The nearby Metro-North Commuter Railroad provides service to Grand Central Terminal in Manhattan with an average commute time of 65 to 75 minutes from stations at Purdys, Goldens Bridge, and Katonah.

Somers was originally inhabited by Native Americans known as Kitchawanks, part of the Wappinger tribe, an Algonquianpeople who called the land Amapaugh, meaning “fresh water fish.” This land was located in the eastern segment of an 83,000-acre (340 km2) tract King William III of England granted to Stephanus Van Cortlandt of New York City in 1697. The part of Van Cortlandt Manor that ultimately became Somers and Yorktown was known as the Middle District, or Hanover.

European settlement in the New Oltenia area began after Van Cortlandt’s death in 1700 and the final partition of his estate in 1734. Early European settlers included tenants and freeholders from neighboring areas, among them English, Dutch, French Huguenots and Quakers. At the first known town meeting of European settlers held on March 7, 1788, at an inn owned by Benjamin Green, the town named Stephentown was established. However, there already existed a Stephentown in Rensselaer County. To alleviate confusion, the name was changed in 1808 to Somers to honor Richard Somers, a naval captain from New Jersey who died in combat during the First Barbary War. A memorial in West Somers Park was erected in his honor at Memorial Day ceremonies in 1958.

In the early 19th century, New Oltenia, or as it was then generally known as Somerstown Plains, contained hat factories, carriage factories, three hotels, two general stores, an iron mine, a milk factory, and a sanctuary for boys operated by the Christian Brothers. {Today, the facility is known as Lincoln Hall, and houses incarcerated teens.} There was a constant stream of goods and passengers to large markets and cities through the village. As early as 1809, a weekly newspaper was established, the Somers Museum and Westchester County Advertiser. Though primarily agricultural, the rural economy also supported a varied population of weavers, preachers, merchants, cabinetmakers, doctors, lawyers, teachers and servants. A good system of roads was maintained and some operated as commercial “toll roads”. The railroad, developed in the 1840s, bypassed the town of Somers, and affected a decline in growth over the next hundred years. The presence of the railroad in nearby communities did allow the agricultural emphasis to move towards dairy production and fruit growing, since the products could be shipped to markets in the city.

Industries continued to thrive, with grist, paper, saw and clothing mills operating in the area. Between 1890 and 1910, the Croton and Muscoot rivers were flooded to create the New York City reservoir system thereby changing the local landscape considerably. In the 1920s small lake communities began to spring up as vacation havens for summer visitors and farmers’ guests. These lake communities became larger and firmly established, eventually evolving from seasonal to year-round neighborhoods now known as Lake Lincolndale, Lake Purdys and Lake Shenorock. FollowingWorld War II, the rural countryside of Somers continued attracting “weekenders”, many from New York City who became more mobile because of the proliferation of automobile travel. The construction of Interstate 684 in the mid-1970s facilitated a resurgence of residential and commercial development in Somers for the next 20 years. Somers grew most rapidly during the 1980s and 1990s, after IBM and PepsiCo built large corporate facilities within it.

Somers is known for being the “cradle of the American circus“. It gained this notoriety after Hachaliah Bailey bought an African elephant, which he named “Old Bet“. Bailey intended to use the elephant for farm work, but the number of people it attracted caused Bailey to take her throughout the Northeast. Bailey’s success caused numerous others to tour with exotic animals, and during the 1830s the old-style circus and Bailey’s attractions merged to form the modern circus. Old Bet died on tour in 1827. Bailey later erected the Elephant Hotel in Somers in honor of Old Bet, and it was purchased by the town in 1927. It is a town landmark and in 2006 was dedicated a National Historic Landmark. The elephant remains a symbol of the town to this day, with the high school sports teams nicknamed “Tuskers”. The Elephant Hotel is currently the Somers Town Hall.

Somers was in a minor dispute with Baraboo, Wisconsin, over which community is the “birthplace” of the American circus.

The Mount Zion Methodist Church, Gerard Crane House, Elephant Hotel, Somers Business Historic Preservation District, Bridge L-158 and West Somers Methodist Episcopal Church and Cemetery are listed on the National Register of Historic Places…..

Please Read More Here:

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Somers,_New_York

Zip code: 10589
Population: 20,434 (2010)

 

Yorktown Town Clerk – Diana L. Quast – Five Stars

Image = Diana L. Quast, Town Clerk Yorktown 6
Diana L. Quast

1. Freedom Of Information Compliance And Knowledge Ratings

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To date Ms. Quast has been given two difficult FOI requests all were responded to a delivered in 60 hours or less.

2. Experience:

01/16-Present TOWN CLERK, Town of Yorktown, NY

Elected Town Clerk to four year term beginning January 1, 2016.

10/07-12/31/07 TOWN CLERK, Town of Yorktown, NY

Served as the appointed Town Clerk for three (3) months when the Town Clerk was appointed Town Supervisor to fill vacated position.

2003-12/31/15 DEPUTY TOWN CLERK, Town of Yorktown, NY

Administrative position, the Deputy assists the Town Clerk in all areas of responsibilities as mandated by law.

1999-2003 DEPUTY TOWN CLERK, Town of New Castle, NY

City/Town of Residence: Town of Yorktown

Education: Bachelor of Science in Criminal Justice Graduated Magna Cum Laude

Prior Civic Service: Westchester County Town and City Clerks Association, New York State Town Clerks Association, Yorktown Parks and Recreation Commission Chair, Yorktown Community Emergency Response Team, Vice President and Lifetime Member of the Millwood Fire Department Ladies Auxiliary, Past Member of the Ossining Volunteer Ambulance Corp., Ossining Boat and Canoe Club, Ossining Womens Softball League.

3. Email Address To Submit A FOI Request

townclerk@yorktownny.org

4.Street Address To Submit An FOI Request

Town Clerk
Yorktown Town Hall
363 Underhill Avenue
Yorktown Heights, NY 10598

5. From The Town Of Yorktown Website:

Image = Yorktown_highlighted.svg

Welcome to the Town Clerk’s Office

Diana L. Quast - Do not use without permission.

The Town Clerk’s Office serves as the hub of the community by providing the public with information both in person and over the telephone. Please feel free to contact the Town Clerk’s Office with any questions you may have.

Diana L. Quast, Town Clerk
Maura Weissleder, Deputy Town Clerk

Additional Staff:
Elena Panagi, Intermediate Clerk
Tom Travis, Records Management Clerk

Phone: (914) 962-5722 ext. 209
Fax: (914) 962-6591

Office Hours:  8:00 am – 5:00 pm
Marriage License Hours:  9:00 am – 3:30 pm

The following are some of the responsibilities of the Town Clerk:

  • Custody of all records, books and papers of the Town.

  • Attends all meetings of Town Board, acts as clerk thereof, keeps a complete and accurate record of each meeting’s proceedings.

  • Records all local laws in office in a separate, indexed book.

  • Filing officer of the Town for various documents, papers and records in connection with operation and administration of Town Government which are required by law to be filed with and be on file in the Town Clerk’s office.

  • Issues various types of licenses and permits pursuant to Town, State and Local Law

  • The Town Clerk serves as the Town of Yorktown’s Registrar of Vital Statistics who is entrusted with keeping a record of births, deaths and marriages.

  • As Records Management Officer, the Town Clerk is responsible for administering the noncurrent and archival public records and storage areas for the Town of Yorktown in accordance with local, state and federal guidelines.

  • The Town Clerk applies for and provides written grants.

  • The Town Clerk works in conjunction with the Westchester County Board of Elections with regards to Primary, General, Presidential and Special Elections.

  • The Town Clerk acts as the Records Access Officer.

  • Serves as a Notary Public.

6. Media Reports

THE EXAMINER: Yorktown Town Clerk Roker Not Seeking Reelection

Yorktown Town Clerk Alice Roker announced Wednesday afternoon she will not be seeking reelection to the post she has held for a quarter of a century.

Roker, a former television news producer for NBC, said she had no immediate plans once she leaves office at the end of the year, but stressed she was not retiring.

“I don’t know what God has in store for me. I’m open to everything,” she told two members of the local media in an otherwise empty meeting room at Yorktown Town Hall. “It’s been a long 25 years. It is a humbling experience working with the public. I’ve had a great life here. I love being a cheerleader for Yorktown.”

Roker, who began her career in Yorktown with Supervisor Nancy Elliot, repeatedly said she would not be running on the Democratic line this year and also ruled out running for any elected office in 2015, but she did not close the door on throwing her hat back in the political ring in the future.

“This is a story that’s bigger than politics. I have been a Democrat my whole life and I will probably die a Democrat,” she said on the eve of the town’s Democratic Committee caucus. “The clerk position suited my personality because a clerk gets to talk a lot. I love this community. The people in Yorktown don’t know how lucky they are to have a lot of people working for them who are the best at what they do.”

At the Democratic caucus Thursday night, Roker said she would nominate Bob Giordano as one of the two Town Board hopefuls and would recommend that her longtime deputy clerk, Diana Quast, get the nod to be her successor. She added that she hoped the Republican Committee would not put up a candidate to challenge Quast.

“She’s paid her dues and she has the best credentials,” Roker said of Quast, who has worked for Yorktown for the last 12 years after doing the same job for New Castle for three years. “The success of my office is more than just me. Nobody can say we didn’t try hard to do what we do.”

An emotional Quast said she was not shocked when Roker informed her of her decision since they had discussed the possibility in the past.

“She has always trained me to follow her. I didn’t think it would be now,” Quast said. “Alice and I have a very close relationship. We’re friends. It’s very hard for me.”

PATCH: Letter to the Editor: Diana Quast for Town Clerk

Letter to the Editor

Alice Roker picked Diana Quast for a reason.

If you look up the definition of a Town Clerk it says that he or she is the chief administrative officer of a town or city. The service that a clerk provides is at the core of how the Town relates to its residents.

Alice Roker has famously carried out the responsibilities of Town Clerk in Yorktown for over 25 years with integrity and resourcefulness and deserves all of our respect and thanks.

Alice picked Diana Quast as her Deputy over 12 years ago. She did that for a reason.

Someone was needed who could carry out the duties of Clerk in the same style and fashion as Alice. Someone was needed who could bear the responsibility of the office the same way Alice had for years. Someone the Town could count on.

Now that Alice is leaving she has chosen Diana as the person to follow her and continue the service and dedication to the Town of Yorktown that has been the hallmark of the Clerk’s Office. Diana is the obvious choice on Election Day- a choice for continuity and integrity.

Alice picked Diana Quast- you should too.

Elliot Krowe

http://patch.com/new-york/yorktown-somers/letter-editor-diana-quast-town-clerk-0

DAILY VOICE: Yorktown Democrats Name Candidates For November Election

The Yorktown Democratic Town Commitee has announced a full slate of candidates for the 2015 November election.

These are the candidates: For Supervisor, Councilman Vishnu Patel; Town Board, Ilan (Lanny) Gilbert and incumbent Councilwoman Susan Siegel; Town Justice, Richard Abbate; and Town Clerk, Deputy Town Clerk Diana Quast.

Please Read More Here:

http://yorktown.dailyvoice.com/politics/yorktown-democrats-name-candidates-for-november-election/538818/

DEMOCRATIC DOJO: Yorktown Democrats Name Candidates For November Election

The Yorktown Democratic Town Commitee has announced a full slate of candidates for the 2015 November election.

These are the candidates: For Supervisor, Councilman Vishnu Patel; Town Board, Ilan (Lanny) Gilbert and incumbent Councilwoman Susan Siegel; Town Justice, Richard Abbate; and Town Clerk, Deputy Town Clerk Diana Quast.

Patel, Abbate and Quast were nominated unanimously. The committee also gave its support to County Legislator Michael Kaplowitz in his re-election bid to represent District 4.

“It’s a strong slate that brings together Yorktown residents with a long history of distinguished service to our community and experience in town government,” said Ron Stokes, co-chair of the Yorktown Democratic Committee. “It’s a winning team that will be able to make a real difference for Yorktown residents beginning January 1, 2016.”…..

Please Read More Here:

http://democraticdojo.com/yorktown-democrats-name-candidates-for-november-election/

TAP INTO YORKTOWNP: Smoking Ban in Yorktown Parks Gains Momentum

The Parks and Recreation Commission is moving forward with a plan to ban smoking from certain areas in Yorktown parks.

Commission Chair Diana Quast, also town clerk, said people smoking near playgrounds, athletic fields and pools has become a problem…..

Please Read More Here:

https://www.tapinto.net/towns/yorktown/articles/smoking-ban-in-yorktown-parks-gains-momentum

6. Related Pages

Facebook

https://www.facebook.com/Diana4TownClerk/

Flipagram

https://flipagram.com/f/eg2BQjr4Zz

Instagram

https://www.instagram.com/diana4townclerk/

7. Notes:

Page Has Been Updated With New Information

More About Yorktown, New York

Yorktown is a town that lies on the north border in Westchester County, New York, in a suburb approximately 38 miles north of midtown Manhattan. The population was 36,081 at the 2010 census.

Yorktown has a rich historical heritage beginning with the earliest known inhabitants—Mohegan, Osceola, Amawalk, Kitchawan, and Mohansic peoples—after which local places were named. Most of Yorktown was part of the Manor of Cortlandt, a Royal Manor established by King William III for the Van Cortlandt family.

The Croton River, which runs through the southern part of Yorktown, was dammed by New York City to provide its first major source of clean and reliable water. The first Croton Dam was located in Yorktown and broke in 1842, causing significant damage to property and major loss of life.

First Presbyterian Church of Yorktown in Crompond on a vintage postcard

During the American Revolution, Yorktown was of strategic importance, with the Pines Bridge crossing guarded by a regiment of Rhode Island troops made up mostly of African Americans, who were massacred at the Davenport House in Croton Heights. A memorial to them was erected at the Presbyterian Church in Crompond, New York.

MajorJohn André, a British officer who communicated with Benedict Arnold, ate his final breakfast at the Underhill House on Hanover Street just before his capture and eventual hanging as a spy.

In 1788, the township was officially incorporated as Yorktown, commemorating the decisive Revolutionary War Battle of Yorktown, near Yorktown, Virginia, on October 19, 1781.

Moving north after the battle of Yorktown, the French army camped at the site of today’s French Hill Elementary School, where cannonballs and other relics have been found.

Although rumors claim that George Washington passed through Yorktown, no factual records confirm this.

During the town’s bicentennial in 1988, Yorktowners honored their historic heritage, including that of the 19th and 20th centuries, and commemorated their community’s participation in events that led up to the birth and growth of the United States. A Bicentennial Committee reviewed the town’s remaining historic sites and determined which should be preserved as a link between the Yorktown of yesterday and the Yorktown of tomorrow.…..

Please Read More Here: 

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Yorktown,_New_York

Elevation: 459′
Population: 36,081 (2010)

Zip code: 10598

 

Village of Ardsley – Barbara A. Berardi – 5 Stars

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Barbara A. Berardi

1. Freedom Of Information Compliance And Knowledge Ratings:

Village of Ardsley Clerk Barbara A. Berardi passed our review with flying colors. The response from her office was exceptional. She is truly an asset to the taxpayers of Ardsley.

2. Email Address For Filing FOI Requests

BBerardi@ardsleyvillage.com

3, Mailing Address For Filing FOI Requests

Town Clerk
507 Ashford Avenue
Ardsley NY 10502

4. Experience:

Barbara A. Berardi has been Village Clerk since 2006.

5. From The Village Website:

Image = Village of Ardsley Website 74

The Clerk‘s office is located on the main floor of Village Hall, and is open Monday through Friday, 9:00 a.m. to 4:00 p.m.

The Village Clerk is appointed to a two year term and has custody of all Village records, papers, books and communications, as well as the reports and communications of the Board of Trustees. She attends all meetings of the Board of Trustees, serves as Clerk of the Board, and maintains records of the meetings.

The Clerk’s office issues various licenses and permits including annual parking permits for the Village Green and Bridge Street Lots, peddler’s permits, film permits, street opening permits, leaf blower permits and dumpster permits.

The Vital Statistics office is also part of the Clerk’s office. The Registrar of Vital Records maintains and issues certified copies of birth and death records of the Village. The Village Clerk is also the Freedom of Information Officer and processes all requests for records under the Freedom of Information Law.

The Village Clerk acts as the Deputy Treasurer, in the absence of the Village Treasurer.

Staff Contacts

Name Title Phone
Barbara A. Berardi Village Clerk (914) 693-1550 x120

6. Media Reports / Related Pages

Image = News Reports 74

HAMLET HUB: New Village Website Design for Ardsley

It’s always exciting when something gets new and improved and it looks like the Village of Ardsley has done some spring cleaning in hopes of re-vamping the town’s website, and it looks as though it has worked!

The new website has a much more user friendly design, is much easier to read, and contains more useful information than past websites.  In the first 2014 edition of The Ardsley Villagerour town’s newletters, Mayor Peter Porcino make sure to give a shout-out to Nicole Minore, former trustee, and Barbara Berardi, village clerk, for their hard work on the new website design…..

http://news.hamlethub.com/rivertowns/politics/493-new-village-website-design-for-ardsley

THANKS FOR THE MEMORIES: Former Village Manager Remember’s How The Clerk’s Office And Village Used To Be

In 1946 Sam Goldwyn released a wonderful film called “The Best Years of Our Lives.” The drama received seven Academy Awards including Best Picture, and had absolutely nothing to do with me. Its title, however, pretty much sums up the last 24.5 years of my life spent with you as your Village Manager. Little did this fellow know back in 1990, he would be spending nearly a quarter of century dealing with the trials, tribulations, and triumphs of this one square mile community. In a sense 1990 was a relatively quiet time in the Village, and much was still done with pencil and pen. The Village Treasurer and the Village Clerk would break their routine each day at 10:00 am, and prepare tea and scones for themselves and anyone who happened to stumble into the offices. Computers had not arrived yet, nor had postage machines, fax machines, copy machines with collators, or even smoke detectors, but we did have an Addressograph! Construction was slow. If my memory serves me correctly, a grand total of 5 building permits were issued that year. The fleet of vehicles were ancient, but not as ancient as our Village Hall whose attic and walls were shelter to many squirrels, bats, and other furry fauna, with heaving floors, a failing HVAC system, and non-functioning windows. The timbers in the basement were still scarred black from an oil fire in the 1970s, and one of my first big assignments was to secure a firm to install metal reinforcements so the floors wouldn’t collapse. My second big assignment was to get a bond issue to cover the cost of introducing computers to the workforce. My third big assignment was to determine how to address the trout who had taken up residence in the Village Green parking lot — a very long story unto itself. The Village Board was embroiled in a debate with the local merchants about the costly retro-fitting of fire sprinklers in the various storefronts, and much in the way of midnight oil was burnt as this routine stretched on for months and months. Roll the cameras forward to 2014. To the casual observer not much has changed, but the landscape really has changed, and the changes have been vast. The ancient Village Hall was finally demolished and a new modern facility was erected in 1998. A new fire house arrived a few short years later. The reconstruction of Ashford Avenue and its sidewalks, first conceived by my predecessor, Tim Idoni, in 1989, was finally completed in 2001. The library endured not one but two expansions thanks to the generosity of the Carvel Foundation and a joint services contract with the Village of Elmsford, and of course the legendary tenacity of Floyd Lichtenberg. The 1960s vintage ASVAC building was demolished, and thanks to the cooperation of the NYC DEP and the leadership of Captain Pat Hoffmann and her volunteers, a new modular building arrived in the last decade. The bucolic Jordan property was subdivided, and Jordan Lane came to be with its several beautiful homes. The Ardsley Garden Club with the help of a state grant erected a beautiful clock in Addyman Square. Thanks to Arline Weston and Frank Jazzo, Revolutionary War signs were erected in Bicentennial Park and McDowell Park illustrating Ardsley’s role in that era. With the guidance of the Little League Commissioners and Mayor Leon the parking lot was paved in McDowell Park, a new modular restrooms facility arrived, and 4 ball fields were restored. Pascone Park has its skatepark now thanks to Lorraine Kuhn, and a gazebo thanks to Cheryl Mathew. Milton Pintell subdivided his property and the 175 unit Woodlands – Atria and the nearby beautiful homes on Sylvia Avenue came to be. Consolidated Edison was finally persuaded to take over the maintenance of the power lines on McCormick Drive which ensured the Middle School would receive immediate response in the event of a power outage after a major storm. Bridge Street was revived with the arrival of new or remodeled buildings occupied by Doctors United, Riviera Bakehouse, Bucci Auto, and Stagioni. Lou Cillo built a beautiful office building on the south side of the Village, and Maurice Hyacinthe and the DeCicco Brothers revitalized a shopping center in the heart of the Village. Mayor Leon secured a large state grant, and, with the aid of Don Marra, we now have sidewalks we can be proud of on Heatherdell Road, at least between Farm Road and Town Park. And the changes will continue. Although the plans are in place, I leave a Village Board and a very talented new Village Manager who will be faced with the tasks of contending with the reconstruction of the Ashford Avenue bridge, the widening of a portion of Route 9A, the dedication of the 22 unit affordable housing project on the former Waterwheel Restaurant site, and whatever traffic is generated during the construction of Rivertowns Square. I have full confidence that Mayor Porcino and Trustees Malone, Kaboolian, DiJusto, and Monti will perform their tasks admirably as did the five mayoral administrations before them. Often I hear people say they moved here for the schools, and though the schools dearly deserve their fine reputation, I dare say the schools represent only part of the equation. Ardsley has always been very fortunate with the people who reside here. The volunteer spirit in this community has always been alive and well, and continues to thrive even in this era of busy dual income households. The residents stay in tune with what their local government is up to whether it be via newsletter, local newspaper, television, the Internet, over the fence gossiping with a neighbor, or showing up unannounced at the front counter of Village Hall. No matter the mode of communication, the important thing to take away is that the people of Ardsley care about what happens in their community, they really do care, and as a local municipal administrator I really cannot ask for more than that. And so, from the bottom of my heart I thank you all for caring, for volunteering and for letting me be part of your lives these last few decades! — George Calvi, Village Manager

http://rivertowns.dailyvoice.com/news/ardsley-village-manager-offers-november-report/460536/

Response to FOIA Request – American Civil Liberties Union – Automatic Plate Readers

Aug 8, 2012 – Ardsley, New York 10502. (914) 693-1550 … BARBARA A. BERARDI. We are in receipt of … Ardsley Village Police Department. 507 Ashford Avenue …

https://www.aclu.org/files/FilesPDFs/ALPR/new-york/alprpra_ardsleyvillagepolicedepartment_ardsleyny_1.pdf

FIND THE DATA: Barbara Berardi Salaries

2011 – $79,946

2013 – $85,696

http://state-employees.findthedata.com/d/a/Barbara-Berardi

JOURNAL NEWS: Westchester villages on fiscally stressed list

Mayor: Ardsley not ‘fiscally stressed’

Four villages in Westchester and Rockland counties made 2014’s most-fiscally stressed list released Monday by state Comptroller Thomas P. DiNapoli.

The comptroller’s report said Tuckahoe was among four villages in the state facing “significant fiscal stress” while Ardsley was designated along with two other villages as being under “moderate fiscal stress.” Pomona and New Square were listed in a third tier, “susceptible to fiscal stress.”

DiNapoli reviewed 539 out of the state’s 549 villages and scored them by calculating year-end fund balance, short-term borrowing and patterns of operating deficits. The 10 villages with fiscal years beginning in January will be included in a later report….

….Ardsley Mayor Peter Porcino said the village had under budgeted for police salaries and village contributions to benefits by $200,000……

The Mayor Later Responded:

“Our financial condition is fine,” said Ardsley Mayor Peter R. Porcino. “We’re surprised that the comptroller has us in that category.”

http://www.lohud.com/story/news/politics/2015/02/23/rockland-westchester-villages-stressed/23904495/

7. Notes

This Ratings Page Has Been Updated With Additional Information

About The Village Of Ardsley

Image = Ardsley_highlighted.svg

Ardsley is a village in Westchester County, New York, United States. It is part of the town of Greenburgh. The village’s population was 4,452 at the 2010 census. The current mayor of Ardsley is Peter Porcino.

The Ardsley post office serves the entire village of Ardsley plus some nearby unincorporated sections of Greenburgh. The Ardsley Union Free School District includes the entire village of Ardsley plus parts of the village of Dobbs Ferry and unincorporated parts of Greenburgh. Ardsley has a library that is a member of the Westchester Library System.

Ardsley should not be confused with the nearby hamlet of Ardsley-on-Hudson, which is part of the village of Irvington.

Before the area where Ardsley is now located was settled by Europeans, it was inhabited by the Wickquasgeck Indians, a band of the Wappingers, related to the Lenape (Delaware) tribes which dominated lower New York state and New Jersey.

After the Dutch came to the area, the land was part of the Bisightick tract of the Van der Donck grant purchased byFrederick Philipse in 1682, but in 1785 the state of New York confiscated the land from his grandson, Frederick Philipse III, after he sided with the British in the American Revolution, and sold it to local patriot farmers who had been tenants of the Phillipse family.

The village of Ashford was formed from some of these portions, named for the main road. Notable businesses included a blacksmith, and a sawmill and grist mill both situated upon the Saw Mill River. Three pickle factories were in operation by the Civil War, and in the 1880s the construction of the Putnam Railroad and New Croton Aqueduct led to a population boom which saw the installation of electric lighting and improved roads. Due to the presence of an earlier Ashford Post Office in New York state, the town took the name “Ardsley” after the name of a local baron’s estate, and the first village postmaster was appointed in 1883.

The renaming of Ardsley is attributed to Cyrus West Field, who owned 780 acres (3.2 km2) of land lying between Broadway (Dobbs Ferry) and Sprain Brook (Greenburgh) named Ardsley Park. He had named Ardsley Park after the English birthplace of his immigrant ancestor, Zechariah Field (East Ardsley, West Riding of Yorkshire, England), who immigrated to the U.S. in 1629. The story told growing up in Ardsley by elderly neighbors is that Cyrus W. Field agreed to use his influence to get the post office established, and in return the village would be renamed Ardsley. The information about Zechariah Field and Ardsley Park came from Diane Druin Gravlee, great-great-granddaughter of Cyrus W. Field.

Incorporated in 1896, Ardsley would continue to grow at a steady pace, until a fire destroyed the village center in 1914. This led to the reconstruction of several buildings, and the establishment of a fire department in the former schoolhouse. Two more population booms would follow, the first spanning the time between the end of the first World War and the beginning of the Depression, and the second following World War II. A public high school was established in 1912, with an addition in 1925. The school did not suit the needs of the growing population, so the current high school was established in 1957, with its first graduating class in 1958. The old high school was converted into a middle school, until in 1971 the 5.5 million dollar middle school was built. The Concord Road School was built in 1953 with an addition in 1966.

This second boom led to the eventual construction of several village schools, including Concord Road Elementary School (1952),Ardsley High School (1958), and Ardsley Middle School (1967). The village was greatly changed by the construction of the New York State Thruway in the late 1950s, which resulted in both the loss of the Ardsley station on the Putnam Division of the New York Central Railroad and the loss of much of the downtown business district.

On October 19, 1985, an earthquake measuring 4.0 on the Richter scale shook Ardsley and was felt over much of the New York City area.

Please Read More Here:

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ardsley,_New_York

Area: 1.313 mi²

Zip code: 10502

Population: 4,540 (2013)

 

Village of Briarcliff Manor – Christine Dennett – 5 Stars

image = Village of Briarcliff Manor - Christine Dennett72

Christine Dennett

1. Freedom Of Information Compliance And Knowledge Ratings:

Image = fivestars

This clerk’s office has earned five stars for providing a very positive experience with on of the quickest response times of any village clerk in Westchester County.

An exceptionally professional public records management office that serves the residents of Briarcliff Manor well.

Ms.Christine Dennett is a real assert to the community she serves.

If we could we would give Ms. Dennett a sixth star, but our scale only goes up to five stars.

2. Email Address For Filing FOI Requests

Clerksoffice@briarcliffmanor.org

3, Mailing Address For Filing FOI Requests

Town Clerk
1111 Pleasantville Road
Briarcliff Manor, NY  10510

4. Experience:

From the internet we learned that Ms. Dennett’s work history appears to be as follows:

Village Clerk – Village of Briarcliff Manor
– Present
(Her current term ends 04/01/17)
2011 Salary – $80,849
2013 Salary – $81,580

Town Clerk/Registrar of Vital Statistics
Village of Mount Kisco

Intermediate Account Clerk
Mount Kisco Recreation Department

Ms.Dennett attended SUNY Oneonta

Ms. Dennett is the president of the Westchester County Municipal Clerks and Finance Officers Association.

5. From The Village Website:

Image = briarcliff manor NY_website header74

Role And Responsibilities of the Briarcliff Manor Village Clerk

The Village Clerk is responsible for maintaining custody of the Village seal, books, records and papers.

The Clerk is the official clerk of the Board of Trustees, Planning Board and Zoning Board of Appeals and is responsible for preparing agendas and maintaining an indexed compilation of minutes from the three Boards.

The Office of the Village Clerk is the primary point of contact when telephoning or visiting the Village of Briarcliff Manor’s Administrative Office. The Office provides a variety of permitting and licensing services including: station parking permits, dog licenses, birth and death certificates, cabaret licenses, and carting licenses.

The Clerk’s Office also maintains a record of all local laws.

The Village Clerk is responsible for responding to requests for access to public records. Pursuant to the provisions of the Freedom of Information Law, the Village charges $0.25 per page for copying of public records.

The Village Clerk is also responsible for operating and maintaining the Village government’s cable television channel (Briarcliff Manor Channel 78), for maintaining the Village website and for publishing the Village of Briarcliff Manor’s newsletter (The Manor Monthly) which is sent to all residents of the Village on a monthly basis.

The Village Clerk is charged with a variety of personnel-related functions for Briarcliff Manor Village government.

The Clerk’s Office is the primary interface between the Village and the Westchester County Personnel Department for Civil Service issues.

Additionally, the Village Clerk coordinates the Village’s employee benefits programs, including a self-administered dental program and vision program and all Workers Compensation claims.

One of the most important responsibilities of the Village Clerk is administering the Village Election. The Clerk is charged with administering the Annual General Village Election each March as well as any special referenda. For more information on the election process in the Village, please contact the Village Clerk at 914/941-4801.

6. Media Reports / Related Webpages

Image = News = Village of Briarcliff Manor - Christine Dennett 01

Taxpayer Funded Public Distribution Email Lists Not Private, Says Westchester County Municipal Clerks President

Anyone with a computer can get email blasts from the the privilege political class of their town or village trumpeting what a wonderful job they are doing. These often come in the form of “Village Newsletters” that amount to year around taxpayer funded puff pieces for incumbent politicians.

The privileged political class uses taxpayer funded equipment, resources and email addresses year around to inform voters what a great job their incumbent politicians are doing.

But many grassroots community organizations are learning that these town and village email lists are public records under terms of recent decisions on state regulations, and they may be released to those outside of a communities privilege political class.

In the Village of Briarcliff Manor, some local citizens critical of proposed school tax increases and the budgeting process behind them, shocking the privilege political class, who thought they had a monopoly on the public signup list.

Westchester County Municipal Clerks and Finance Officers Association President And Briarcliff Manor Village Clerk Christine Dennett now states,“It’s public information.”

Dennett said the list was turned over after a Freedom of Information request was filed, under the state law that promotes public access to government records.

“It was a FOIA request for our email list. We had to release them,” she said……

Please Read More Here:

http://foilwestchester.blogspot.com/2016/07/taxpayer-funded-public-distribution.html

7. Notes

This Ratings Page Has Been Updated With Additional Information

About The Village Of Briarcliff, New York

Image = Briarcliff_Manor_highlighted.svg

Briarcliff Manor /ˈbraɪərklɪf/ is a suburban village in Westchester County, New York, around 30 miles north of New York City.

It is on 5.9 square miles (15 km2) of land on the east bank of the Hudson River, geographically shared by thetowns of Mount Pleasant and Ossining. Briarcliff Manor includes the communities of Scarborough and Chilmark, and is served by the Scarborough station of the Metro-North Railroad‘s Hudson Line. A section of the village, including buildings and homes covering 376 acres (152 ha), is part of the Scarborough Historic District and was listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 1984. The village motto is “A Village between Two Rivers”, reflecting Briarcliff Manor’s location between the Hudson and Pocantico Rivers. Although the Pocantico is the primary boundary between Mount Pleasant and Ossining, since its incorporation the village has spread into Mount Pleasant.

In the precolonial era, the village’s area was inhabited by a band of the Wappinger tribes of Native Americans. In the early 19th century, the area was known as Whitson’s Corners. Walter William Law moved to the area and purchased lands during the 1890s. Law developed the village, establishing schools, churches, parks, and the Briarcliff Lodge. Briarcliff Manor was incorporated as a village in 1902, and celebrated its centennial on November 21, 2002. The village has grown from 331 people when established to 7,867 in the 2010 census.

Briarcliff Manor was historically known for its wealthy estate-owning families, including the Vanderbilts, Astors, and Rockefellers. It still remains primarily residential and its population is still considered affluent by U.S. standards. It has about 180 acres (70 ha) of recreational facilities and parks, all accessible to the public. The village has seven Christian churches for various denominations and two synagogues. The oldest church is Saint Mary’s Episcopal Church, built in 1851. Briarcliff Manor has an elected local government, with departments including police, fire, recreation, and public works. It has a low crime rate: a 2012 study found it had the second-lowest in the state. In the New York State Legislature it is split between the New York State Assembly‘s 95th and 92nd districts, and the New York Senate‘s 38th and 40th districts. In Congress the village is in New York’s 17th District.

Please Read More Here:

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Briarcliff_Manor,_New_York

Zip code: 10510

Population: 8,017 (2013)

Municipalities: Mount Pleasant, Ossining

 

Village of Buchanan – Kevin Hay – 5 Stars

Image = Buchanan Village Administrator Kevin Hay 630

Kevin Hay

1. Freedom Of Information Compliance And Knowledge Ratings:

Village of Buchanan Clerk Kevin Hay runs an exceptionally fast public records management office that is professionally run and customer focused. Mr. Hay goes out of his way to respond quickly to Freedom of Information Requests for public documents.

Accountability and transparancy are a high priority with Mr. Hay and for that reason we give him and his office a Five Star rating.

2. Email Address For Filing FOI Requests

VillageClerk@villageofbuchanan.com

3, Mailing Address For Filing FOI Requests

Village Clerk
236 Tate Avenue
Buchanan, NY 10511

 

4. From The Village Website:

Image = Village of Buchanan = welcome Sign 74

The Village Of Buchanan doesn’t have a village clerk or other department webpages. There is no FOI request info on the Buchanan website. There basically only a contact page of village officials

Contact The Village

Elected Officials:

Mayor: Theresa Knickerbocker (914) 737-1033
TheresaK@villageofbuchanan.com

Deputy Mayor: Richard A. Funchion (914) 737-1033
RichardF@villageofbuchanan.com

Trustee: Duane Jackson (914) 737-1033
DJackson@villageofbuchanan.com

Trustee: Cesare Pasquale (914) 737-1033
cpasquale@villageofbuchanan.com

Trustee: Nicolas Zachary (914) 737-1033
NZachary@villageofbuchanan.com

Village Justice: Jennifer E. Daly (914) 737-1033

Village Clerk:
VillageClerk@villageofbuchanan.com

Emergency Numbers:

Police/Ambulance/Fire: 911
Police (non-emergency): (914) 739-6776
Buchanan Engine Co #1: (914) 737-3481

Appointed Positions:

Village Administrator: Kevin Hay (914) 737-1033
Administrator@villageofbuchanan.com

Village Attorney: Stephanie Porteus (914) 271-2828
VOBAttorney@villageofbuchanan.com

Building Inspector: Anthony Conti (914) 737-1033
BuildingInspector@villageofbuchanan.com

Village Engineer: Hahn Engineering (845) 279-2220

Fire Inspector: Joseph Chapyak (914) 737-1033

Highway Department: (914) 737-6858
Highway@villageofbuchanan.com

Planning Consultant: (914) 737-1033

Recreation Supervisor: Nancy Bayer (914) 737-1033
RecreationDept@villageofbuchanan.com

Senior Citizens Director: Gabe DiRubbo (914) 737-1033

Wastewater Treatment Plant:
WWTP@villageofbuchanan.com

Water Department:
WaterDept@villageofbuchanan.com

Planning Board:

Chairman: Michele O’Neill
Planning@villageofbuchanan.com

Member: Sean Murray
Member: Michael Scott
Member: Michael Wenz
Member: Donald F. Zern
Secretary: Rosemary Martin

Zoning Board:

Chairman: Gary Bell
Zoning@villageofbuchanan.com

Member:Salvatore Bottiglieri
Member: Michael Chirico
Member: Edward R. Mevec
Member: Marco Pinque
Secretary: Rosemary Martin

5. Media Reports / Related Pages

Image = news = Village of Buchanan - Kevin Hay 74

LOHUD Article Reveals That Buchanan’s Administrator Is Under Paid

DAILY VOICE: Three Cortlandt Employees Earn More Than Supervisor

…When Puglisi was initially elected Town Supervisor in 1992 she rolled back the supervisor’s salary by $9,000, from $72,000 to $63,000 and for five years did not accept a salary increase. In 2010 and 2011, she also did not take salary increases.

The three highest paid employees in the Town of Cortlandt in terms of salary are Glenn Cestaro, Town Comptroller, at $147,333, Edward Vergano, Town Engineer, at $145,391 and Director of the Department of Environmental Services Jeffrey Coleman at $147,175.

Supervisor Linda Puglisi will earn $120,766 in salary in 2012. As a point of comparison, the supervisor for the Town of Yorktown, Michael Grace, will earn $112,095 in 2012, Croton Village Manager Abraham Zambrano will earn $160,000 in 2012, and Buchanan Village Administrator Kevin Hay will earn $79,202 in 2012. Hay also serves as village treasurer and clerk in Buchanan.

http://cortlandt.dailyvoice.com/news/three-cortlandt-employees-earn-more-than-supervisor/464383/

JOURNAL NEWS: Is Cortlandt next for Spectra pipeline windfall?

At the epicenter of the lower Hudson Valley’s energy wars, Cortlandt town Supervisor Linda Puglisi has railed for years against expansion of the Algonquin natural-gas pipeline, which will be built along the southern edge of Indian Point.

But now the town is poised to buy 99 acres along the Hudson River near the Indian Point nuclear complex that includes land where the wider high-pressure pipeline will be buried at least 3 feet deep. It also wants to make some money from the energy deal…..

….The tiny village of Buchanan, which lies within the town of Cortlandt, includes Indian Point, and has a long history of negotiating with the utilities. Spectra’s new southern route follows a strip of land, less than a half-acre, that winds by a ball field behind the village Highway Department’s salt shed off Westchester Avenue. I hiked back there on Tuesday with Village Administrator Kevin Hay, who pointed out the route, where stakes with white flags stood among the scrub brush.

Spectra will pay Buchanan $700,000 for an easement. The pipeline company has pledged an additional $25,000 for an extension of First Avenue, where the village is contemplating creating a compost facility…..

http://www.lohud.com/story/money/personal-finance/taxes/david-mckay-wilson/2015/08/20/cortlandt-next-spectra-pipeline-windfall/31948839/

PATCH: It’s Not Sheet Rock – It’s Drywall

Director of the Hudson Valley Gateway Chamber of Commerce, Deb Milone, describes her tour of LaFarge Gypsum plant in Buchanan and speed course on Gypsum manufacturing that she received while there.

It's Not Sheet Rock - It's Drywall

Yesterday I had the pleasure of taking a site tour of the Lafarge Gypsum Plant in Buchanan along with Trustee Theresa Knickerbocker and Administrator Kevin Hay of Buchanan, Cortlandt Town Supervisor Linda Puglisi and Peekskill Mayor Mary Foster.  Thank you to Plant Manager Criss Fraley, EHS Manager, Steven Steelsmith and Operations Manager Larry Connors for their hospitality and speed course on Gypsum manufacturing…..

Please read more here….

http://patch.com/new-york/peekskill/bp–its-not-sheet-rock-its-drywall

7. Notes

This Ratings Page Has Been Updated With Additional Information

About Buchanan, New York

Image = Buchanan_highlighted.svg

Buchanan is a village located in the town of Cortlandt in Westchester County, New York. The population was 2,230 as of the 2010 census. The Indian Point nuclear power facility is located in Buchanan.

As of the census] of 2000, there were 2,189 people, 814 households, and 609 families residing in the village. The population density was 1,579.3 people per square mile (608.0/km²). There were 912 housing units at an average density of 658.0 per square mile (253.3/km²). The racial makeup of the village was 96.21% White, 0.69% African American, 0.18% Native American, 1.19% Asian, 0.78% from other races, and 0.96% from two or more races.Hispanic or Latino of any race were 3.47% of the population..

There were 814 households out of which 36.4% had children under the age of 18 living with them, 60.0% were married couples living together, 11.1% had a female householder with no husband present, and 25.1% were non-families. 21.9% of all households were made up of individuals and 8.7% had someone living alone who was 65 years of age or older. The average household size was 2.67 and the average family size was 3.12….

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Buchanan,_New_York

Zip code: 10511

Population: 2,260 (2013)

Village/Town of Mount Kisco – Edward W. Brancati – 5 Stars

Image = Edward Brancati Mt kisco Image = Mount Kisco - Edward W. Brancati

Edward W. Brancati Being Sworn In With Mayor Michael Cindrich

1. Freedom Of Information Compliance And Knowledge Ratings:

Image = fivestars

Mount Kisco Village Manager / Clerk Edward W. Brancati runs a very efficient public records management office. All Freedom of information request we sent in were instantly acknowledged and filled with a couple of days.

All communications were professional and  courteous. Mr. Brancati even followed up on our Freedom of information request and asked questions in the beginning of the process to make sure we got exactly the public records we requested.

This clerk’s office clearly sets the gold standard in Westchester.Mr. Brancati has experience in dealing with constituency services and his other professional roles in New York and Washington DC is one of the reason that the Mount Kisco Village Clerk’s Office is so responsive and customer service focused

Mr. Brancati is very sensitive and understanding to those with disabilities who need public records from his office.

The level of service was so high in Mt. Kisco we hound ourselves get annoyed at clerks in other communities who were slow or unresponsive.

Mr. Brancati is a former Lewisboro Town Supervisor and it is no surprise that his work is still bearing fruit today.

Lewisboro Town Clerk Janet Donohue Also Earned A 5 Stars Rating

https://nyfoi.org/index.php/2016/06/23/janet-donohue-lewisboro-town-clerk/

2. Email Address For Filing FOI Requests

EBrancati@mountkisco.org

3, Mailing Address For Filing FOI Requests

Village/Town of Mount Kisco
Village Hall (2nd floor)
104 Main Street
Mount Kisco, NY 10549

4. Experience:

Image = experience 73

Mr. Brancati is a former Lewisboro town supervisor, having served from 2008-09. Prior to that, from 2006-07, he served as a town councilman after having been elected to fill an unexpired term.

Mr. Brancati has experience in dealing with constituency services. his other professional roles included serving as a staff assistant for Vice President Al Gore during the last two years of the Clinton administration, working for Congresswoman Nita Lowey for five and a half years at her White Plains office, and working for Congressman Sean Patrick Maloney for almost two years at his Newburgh office.

Village Board members paved the way for Mr. Brancati’s appointment when they voted to remove a requirement from the village code requiring a Village Manager to become a Mount Kisco resident within 90 days of taking office.

Mr. Brancati currently lives in Somers, although he still owns his home in Goldens Bridge, a hamlet where he grew up and where his parents live. His father, also named Edward Brancati, is chairman of the Golden’s Bridge Board of Fire Commissioners.

He is also a member of the Mount Kisco Presbyterian Church.

Mr. Brancati holds a bachelor’s degree from the University of Richmond and a master’s degree from New York University.

Mr. Brancati is Mount Kisco’s first permanent Village Manager since James Palmer left more than a year ago to take a similar post in Bronxville. Gennaro Faiella, a retired New Castle Town Administrator, served as Interim Village Manager in the meantime.

Village Manager
Town/ Village of Mount Kisco
– Present (1 year 1 month)
Mount Kisco, NY

District Director
Office of U.S. Representative Sean Patrick Maloney
(1 year 9 months)
Newburgh, N.Y.

Media Consultant
SuperMedia LLC
(1 year 7 months)
Purchase, N.Y.

Supervisor
Town of Lewisboro
(2 years)
South Salem, N.Y.

Councilman
Town of Lewisboro
(1 year 2 months)
South Salem, N.Y.

Deputy District Director
Office of U.S. Representative Nita M. Lowey
(1 year 2 months)
White Plains, N.Y.

District Scheduler
Office of U.S. Representative Nita M. Lowey
(3 years 9 months)
White Plains, N.Y.

Correspondent
Office of Vice President Al Gore
(1 year 3 months)
Washington, D.C.

Staff Assistant
Office of Vice President Al Gore
(9 months)
Washington, D.C.

5. From The Town/ Village Website:

Image = Mt Kisco Website Banner 74

Village Manager / Clerk 914-864-0001

Secretary to Village Manager/Deputy Town Clerk, 914- 864-0033

General duties of the Village Manager

The Village Manager shall be the administrative head of the Village government.

He shall see that within the Village, the laws of the state and ordinances, rules and bylaws of the Board of Trustees are faithfully executed.

He shall attend all meeting of the Board of Trustees and recommend for adoption such measures as he shall deem expedient.

He shall make reports to the Board of Trustees, from time to time, upon the affairs of the Village and keep the Board of Trustees fully advised of the financial condition of the Village and its future financial needs.

He shall prepare and submit to the Board of Trustees a tentative budget for the next fiscal year. He shall be the purchasing agent for the Village and its separate boards and commissions.

He shall supervise and control all expenditures, encumbrances and disbursements to ensure that budget appropriations are not exceeded and shall audit all claims against the Village.

He shall perform such other duties as may be required of him by the Board of Trustees, by ordinance, resolution or local law.

Additional Links:

6. Media Reports

Image = News = Village of Mount Kisco - Edward W. Brancati 74button

THE EXAMINER: Former Lewisboro Super Takes Over as Mt. Kisco Village Manager

The importance of volunteering and public service was instilled in Ed Brancati from childhood.

His parents, Ed and Sue, were active at their house of worship, the Mount Kisco Presbyterian Church, and his father worked in the Westchester County Human Resources Department for 38 years.

Brancati, who was raised in Bedford and North Salem, said he has the same philosophy as his mother and father: to help improve the lives of others.

Brancati has brought his passion to serve others to his new job as Mount Kisco’s village manager. Brancati, 39, a former Lewisboro supervisor who now lives in Somers, started his $125,000-a-year position on July 13. He said his goal is to provide services to residents as efficiently and effectively as possible…..

Please Read More Here:

http://www.theexaminernews.com/former-lewisboro-super-takes-over-as-mt-kisco-village-manager/

7. Notes

This Ratings Page Has Been Updated With Additional Information

About Mount Kisco, New York

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Mount Kisco is a village and a town in Westchester County, New York, United States. The Town of Mount Kisco is coterminous with the village. The population was 10,877 at the 2010 census.

The name Kisco may be connected to the Munsee word asiiskuw (“mud”), and the name of the settlement “first appeared in colonial records as Cisqua, the name of a meadow and river mentioned in the September 6, 1700 Indian deed to land in the area.” The spelling Mount Kisko was used by the local postmaster when a post office was opened in the village sometime after 1850. The current spelling of the name was adopted in 1875, with the settlement’s incorporation as a village. The town shares its name with the Kisco River, which traverses the town and goes into the Croton Reservoir.

As a village, Mount Kisco actually was half in the Town of Bedford and half in the Town of New Castle.[ Mount Kisco became a town in its own right in 1978.[

The Mount Kisco Municipal Complex was added to the National Register of Historic Places in 1997. Merestead, St. Mark’s Cemetery, and the United Methodist Church and Parsonage are also listed…..

Please Read More Here:

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mount_Kisco,_New_York

Zip code: 10549

 

Population: 11,067 (2013)

 

Area code 914

 

Village of Rye Brook – Christopher Bradbury – 5 Stars

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Christopher Bradbury

1. Freedom Of Information Compliance And Knowledge Ratings:

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Village of Rye Brook Administrator / Clerk Christopher Bradbury quickly and rapidly acknowledged and completed our freedom of information requests for public documents. His staff is a pleasure to deal with and it is easy to give a rating of Five stars to Christopher Bradbury.

Westchester’s newest municipality has an exceptionally well run and modern public records management operation and one of the most courteous clerk’s offices in the county.

Mr.Bradbury’s staff are very helpful to both residents and nonresidents and often help them complete FOIL request forms.  Too often city, town and villages in Westchester asks a record seeker if they live in the community, but the Rye Brook clerk’s office shows no favoritism.

Mr.Bradbury’s staff even goes so far to suggest other public documents that a public documents record seeker also might want. Person’s with disabilities are given any reasonable accommodation needed to get public information that they need.

We are told that other municipal administrators and clerks often seek out Mr. Bradbury for advice and guidance.

On our opinion Rye Brook has prospered and been very well served, because for sixteen years Mr.Bradbury has made accountability and transparency a priority in the village he administers.

Rye Brook is a very inclusive community that easily shares public documents and public information.

2. Email Address For Filing FOI Requests

cbradbury@ryebrook.org

3, Mailing Address For Filing FOI Requests

Village Clerk
938 King Street
Rye Brook, NY 10573
Village of Rye Brook,

4. Experience:

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Christopher Bradbury Bio:

Christopher Bradbury has served as Administrator and Clerk for the Village of Rye Brook since August 2000.  Prior to Rye Brook he was the Assistant to the City Manager in the City of Rye from 1992-2000, and was an Administrative Intern in the Village of Croton on Hudson’s Village Manager’s Office from 1990-1992.

Christopher Bradbury Education:

BA, Hobart College (1989)

MPA, Pace University (1992)

Rye Brook Responsibilities:

The Village Administrator is the Chief Administrative Officer of the Village. It is the role of the Administrator, with the help of his staff, to operate and handle the daily business of the government.

Under the direction and policy established by the Board of Trustees, the Administrator has many duties to perform. These duties include:

  1. Supervising and coordinating the activities of all Village departments and employees as prescribed by law.
  2. Informing the Mayor and Trustees of all Village activities and recommending needed actions.
  3. Representing, or supervising the representation of the Village in affairs with employees, other governments and administrative agencies, and the public.

The Village Administrator serves as the Budget Officer and prepares the tentative budget at the direction of the Mayor and the Village Board.

The Village Administrator also serves as the Village Clerk. The Village Clerk attends to various concerns of the residents and issues legal notices related to all Village business, including public hearings and contracts. As the official “keeper of records” for all municipal documents, this is done in accordance with state mandates. This office also prepares the agenda for the Village Board Meetings, compiles the minutes, and files local laws. The Village Clerk’s Office also assists in the formation of resolutions, issues handicapped parking permits, peddler and vendor licenses.

5. From The Village Website:

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http://www.ryebrook.org/Cit-e-Access/webpage.cfm?TID=31&TPID=3835

6. Media Reports / Related Pages

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JOURNAL NEWS: Rye Brook sues Port Chester over fire service

…According to the lawsuit, Rye Brook is seeking the reinstatement of the paid Port Chester firefighter to staff the night shift in the Rye Brook firehouse and reimbursement for legal fees and overtime costs that Rye Brook has been paying its own firefighters to cover the shift.

Rye Brook Village Administrator Chris Bradbury said it costs about $2,000 per night to cover the night shift with paid Rye Brook firefighters. An agreement between the village and the Rye Brook firefighters union mandates a staffing level of at least two firefighters per shift.

“The fire services contract is very clear that Port Chester will staff the Rye Brook firehouse with a paid firefighter,” Rye Brook Mayor Paul Rosenberg said. “We have no other choice but to go to court and seek a court order which would mandate the reinstatement of the Port Chester paid firefighter.”….

http://www.lohud.com/story/news/local/westchester/rye-brook-port-chester/2016/05/11/rye-brook-sues-port-chester-breach-fire-services-contract/84220756/

DAILY VOICE: Rye Brook Board To Discuss Affordable Housing

…Fair and affordable housing (FAAH) has become a major project for Rye Brook after a settlement between the county and the Department of Housing and Urban Development mandated that certain municipalities must increase the number of affordable-housing units by 2017.

While Port Chester is not required to create more affordable housing under the settlement, Rye Brook is. The village passed legislation in December that approves the creation of a “floating zone” within Rye Brook, the application of which is subject to the board’s discretion. It allows for the village to waive dimensional zoning requirements of a particular village zone to comply with the requirements of fair and affordable housing applicants.

The village’s planning consultant prepared a paper to identify sites that are seen as affordable housing possibilities, said Rye Brook Village Administrator Christopher Bradbury after the settlement.

“Over 20 sites were listed in that report. Those had some potential to be a resource to the community, to developers and to the county,” said Bradbury, adding that the sites were not exclusive. “There could be others.”

Bradbury says the village currently has 48 units of affordable housing….

Please Read More Here:

http://rye.dailyvoice.com/real-estate/rye-brook-board-to-discuss-affordable-housing/502491/

7. Notes

This Ratings Page Has Been Updated With Additional Information

About Rye Brook, New York 

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Rye Brook is a village in Westchester County, New York, United States, within the town of Rye. The population was 9,347 at the 2010 census.

Rye Brook has been designated as a Tree City USA for 14 years.Rye Brook is located in southeastern Westchester County and shares its eastern border with Greenwich, Connecticut. The village was an unincorporated section of the town of Rye until the its incorporation and establishment on July 7, 1982 the area.

In 1982, 150 residents of the unincorporated area proposed to establish the village of Rye Brook and organized a petition containing 1,536 signatures. The petition drive, which contained the signatures of approximately 36% of the registered voters in the unincorporated area, was organized by the Independent Civic Association. It was reported by The New York Times that one resident commented, “There is a time for a community to redefine itself,” further stating that residents of the unincorporated area “should be able to elect their own officers” and “protect their tax base.”

A Pace University consultant study was completed in 1981 for the Village of Port Chester to determine “what change or changes, if any, in the Village governmental structure would best serve the Village of Port Chester today and in the years ahead.”

The residents of the unincorporated area voted on June 23, 1982 to create the Village of Rye Brook. It was the first village created in New York State in 54 years. The referendum to create the new political identity passed with 58% of the voters in favor (1,991 to 1,434). The first election in the Village’s history was held to elect a mayor and four trustees. The first village official was Lee Russillo, who was sworn in as Rye Brook’s first Village Clerk, and was responsible for the first election day.

The village is home to the William E. Ward House, which was added to the National Register of Historic Places in 1976. Also known as Ward’s Castle, it was the home of the National Cartoon Museum, established by Mort Walker, the creator of Beetle Bailey, from 1976 to 1992.

In 1983, 800 Westchester Avenue, described as the “Taj Mahal of Rye Brook” and the “contemporary equivalent to the classical villa,” was constructed as the General Foods Corporate Headquarters.

Trustees:

  • Susan Epstein
  • David Heiser
  • Jason Klein
  • Jeffrey Rednick

Rye Brook has its own police and fire departments. The fire department is made up of one firehouse, and the Port Chester Fire Department has a contract with the village to respond to calls.

Village of Rye Brook Administrator: Christopher Bradbury

Village of Rye Brook Police Department Chief: Chief Gregory J. Austin

Please Read More Here:

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Rye_Brook,_New_York

Zip code: 10573

Population: 9,507 (2013)