NEW YORK STATE SENATE — Westchester County – District 35 — Andrea Stewart-Cousins (D) Westchester

Photo of New York State Senator Andrea Stewart-Cousins
Andrea Stewart-Cousins is an American politician and educator from Yonkers, New York. A member of the Democratic Party, Stewart-Cousins represents District 35 in the New York State Senate. She serves as the body’s Majority Leader 

Andrea Stewart-Cousins (D, IP, WP)

Senate Majority Leader
35th Senate District
District 35 Map

Contact Information

Website
Facebook
Twitter @AndreaSCousins

District Office

28 Wells Avenue, Building #3
Yonkers, NY 10701
Phone: (914) 423-4031
Fax: (914) 423-0979

Albany Office

188 State Street Room 907, Legislative Office Building
Albany, NY 12247
Phone: (518) 455-2585
Fax: (518) 426-6811

Committee Membership

Andrea Stewart-Cousins is the first woman in the history of New York State to lead a conference in the New York State Legislature .

Ms. Stewart-Cousins was first elected to the New York State Senate in 2006.

Prior to her Senate service, Stewart-Cousins was a Westchester County Legislator from 1996 to 2006.

After the Democratic Party won an outright Senate majority in the 2018 elections, Stewart-Cousins became Majority Leader in January 2019.

Stewart-Cousins first ran for New York State Senate in 2004, but was defeated by 18 votes by incumbent Republican Sen. Nicholas Spano.

In 2006, she challenged Nick Spano again and defeated him.

As of 2019, Senate District 35 includes all of Greenburgh and Scarsdale and portions of Yonkers, White Plains and New Rochelle .

Stewart-Cousins was born in 1951 in Yonkers, New York. She earned her Bachelor of Science Degree from Pace University and her teaching credentials in Business Education from Lehman College.

She received her Masters of Public Administration from Pace University in May 2008 and is a member of Pi Alpha Alpha, the public administration honor society.

She spent twenty years in the private sector, including thirteen years in sales and marketing with New York Telephone.

She also pursued a career in journalism and teaching before entering public service.

Stewart-Cousins’s public service career began in 1992, when she was appointed as the Director of Community Affairs in the City of Yonkers.

Stewart-Cousins was married to the late Thomas Cousins.

She has three children and four grandchildren



Greenburgh Town Clerk – Judith A. Beville – Under Review

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Judith A. Beville

1. Freedom Of Information Compliance And Knowledge Ratings:

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Status – Under Review – Greenburgh Town Clerk Judith Beville has failed to respond to some of our freedom of information requests and phone calls to her office.

Ms. Beville’s Office seems not to be consumer oriented at all.

Oddly, the clerk’s web page lists the town’s main number instead of the clerk’s phone number. When asked about this Carol in the office said that Ms. Beville did not want her staff bothered with calls that might be for other Greenburgh town departments.

Ms. Beville’s staff can be difficult at times, because of the clerks attitude of not wanting to be bothered with questions from residents.

Ms. Beville fails to realize that the Greenburgh Clerk’s office is often the first point of contact for many town taxpayers and voters that have a question or concern.

It is important forMs. Beville to do a better job in order to ensure access to information in an efficient, convenient and unencumbered manner.

Ms.Beville needs to do more to help to facilitate a resident’s access to information as well as assisting them in navigating their course through local government on any matter or issue.

Maintaining a customer friendly environment for the public needs to start being of high importance to Greenburgh Town Clerk Judith Beville.

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Quickly and efficiently responding to and completing FOI Requests seems to a bit of a problem. In public statements Ms. Beville has said the hardest part of her job is…

The most challenging part of my job is just making sure that things are done in a timely manner.

I suppose that one of the most challenging parts of my job is keeping a clear desk! But I really enjoy what I do. As a reelected official, we are going to be confronted with challenges every day.

Ms. Beville has often stated that that Greenburgh has a statutory period of time to first acknowledge receipt of a request for information and that she has the right NOT to immediately respond or produce any information.

This is a very bureaucratic approach that doesn’t lead to accountability, confidence or transparency in Greenburgh.

When Greenburgh Town Clerk Judith Beville can legally and unnecessarily withhold a taxpayer’s access to a public document until the last minute of the last hour of the last day of the FOI laws stated statutory times, but morally and ethically it is wrong for Ms.Beville to unnecessarily withhold a taxpayers access to a public record.

Sadly many taxpayers in Ardsley, Dobbs Ferry, Elmsford, Hastings On Hudson, Irvington and Tarrytown feel that Ms. Beville’s motives for withholding public records are political in nature.

Ms. Beville, likes playing it both ways.

When a New York State’s “Committee On Open Government” Executive Director Robert Freeman issues an advisement in her favor, then she is quick to use it to deny taxpayers access to public records they technically own.

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But when one of Mr. Freeman’s issues an advisement from the Committee Open Government not in her favor she takes the position that

While that has been the position of the Committee on Open Government, we note that its advisory opinions are not binding upon the Town

With Ms. Beville’s FOI games a Greenburgh town resident is damned either way.

Often Greenburgh’s taxpayers, who want access to public documents, must go through the additional expense of an FOI appeal or court case. This is because of Ms. Beville’s inconsistent manner in handling Freedom of Information requests for public documents.

If Ms. Beville or others in Greenburgh’s privileged political class want to keep secrets inside town hall.

New Yorks problem with local corruption is a lack of accountability and transparency. Ms. Beville’s failure to provide quick access to public record and her inconsistencies make a fertile ground for corruption that the taxpayers of Ardsley, Dobbs Ferry, Elmsford, Hastings On Hudson, Irvington and Tarrytown must ultimately pay for.

2. Email Address For Filing FOI Requests

townclerk@greenburghny.com

3, Mailing Address For Filing FOI Requests

Town Clerk
177 Hillside Avenue
Greenburgh, NY 10607

4. Experience:

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Greenburgh Town Clerk Judith A. Beville refused to provide a short biographical paragraph to this public interest project to measure the responsiveness of Westchester County’s town clerks.

On the internet we found the following for Ms.Beville: 

City/Town of Residence: Town of Greenburgh (White Plains)

Once a member on the Valhalla Union Free Public School Board.

Email: jabeville@yahoo.com

Many town residents have said Beville’s hosting of fundraisers, farmers market music guests, cable public access shows and other events distracted Beville from her core responsibilities.

Despite Ms.Beville and the town board’s efforts to license massage parlors in town. The town is plagued by massage parlors that are really being used for prostitution.

5. From The Town Website:

Trucks drive through a flooded road in Greenburgh, N.Y. Sunday, March 14, 2010 after a storm passed through the region. (AP Photo/Craig Ruttle)
Trucks drive through a flooded road in Greenburgh, N.Y. Sunday, March 14, 2010 after a storm passed through the region. (AP Photo/Craig Ruttle)

WELCOME TO GREENBURGH: Image From The Town Of Greenburgh Website Home Page, Managed By Town Clerk Judith Beville

The Office of the Town Clerk Provides the Following Services for Town Residents

Agendas & Meetings
Coordinates and prepares all Town Board Agendas (Tentative, Final, Special Meetings, Work Sessions, Outreach Meetings, receives requests for street closings for holiday and civic association events and prepares resolutions for agenda)

Bids
Places Legal Notices for all Town Departments in Official Town Newspaper.  Receives and files Bids.

Cable
Serves as liaison between Town residents and Cable companies.  Assists resident’s in resolving Cable related problems and oversees Cable contracts along with the Legal Department.

Dog Licensing
Serves as Administrator for the Dog Licensing Program for Unincorporated Greenburgh and the Town’s Six Villages.  Issues New Licenses, Annual Renewals, and Replacement Tags

Elections
Coordinates Elections with Westchester County Board of Elections.  Acts as a satellite office for the Board of Elections on all election days. Coordinates the use and set-up of the Town’s 81 Polling Places. Assists in the delivery of materials for the Board of Elections to polling places. Works with Elections Inspector Coordinators in assigning election inspectors.  Supplies Voter Registration and Absentee Ballot Forms.

Freedom of Information (FOIL)
Receives all Foil requests and disseminates to appropriate department for review and response.  Contacts applicant upon response, provides submitted documents, collects any associated fees.  Coordinates Foil Appeals with Town Board. The Town Clerk serves as the Freedom of Information Officer.

Licensing & Permits
New York State Licenses: Fishing, Hunting, Handicap Parking Permits
Town of Greenburgh Licenses: Cabaret, Canvassing/Peddlers & Solicitors, Filming, Going out of Business, Sanitation, Taxicab and Taxi Driver

Records Management Officer
Coordinates the retention of all Town records, keeping in compliance with the New York State Retention Schedule. Generates departmental reports for all records stored.  Oversees the scheduling for destruction of all Town records, as per the New York State Retention Schedule.

Senior Citizen Rent Abatement Program (ETPA)
Serves as liaison for qualified Town residents and New York State Division of Housing & Community Renewal Office, including annual report for Receiver of Taxes

Vital Records
Issues original birth, death and marriage certificates. Retains all vital records and issues certified copies.  Does searches for Genealogy. Apostles

Sales Tax Letters
Issues letters to residents and businesses for correct Sales Tax amount for the Town

Code Of The Town Of Greenburgh
Files newly adopted Local Laws with NYS Department of State; Maintains and updates Town Code Books, distributes supplements to all Agencies

Miscellaneous
Maintains book of Dangerous Conditions; Town Clerk is the receiver of the following documents; Notice of Claims, Summonses, Petitions, Certioraris, Scar Applications, etc. Maintains Oath of Office Book for elected officials and all other oaths administered by Town Clerk; Maintains and updates Boards & Commissions and  Civic Association lists; Maintains records for the Board of Ethics; Coordinates Internship program for the Town

6. Media Reports

GREENBURGH TOWN CLERK SAYS DON’T BLAME HER FOR TOWN’S POOR WEBSITE

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It seems Town Supervisor Paul Feiner and Town Clerk Judith Beville, both of whom are running for reelection this fall, are touchy on the subject of who is to blame for the Town’s failing grade for its website.

Town Clerk Judith Beville said today that she is not responsible for the Town’s website, which received a failing grade last fall from Albany-based public interest organization Empire Group…..

Even though Ms. Beville claims to have never had any responsibility whatsoever for the town’s website, a press release from Mr. Feiner published (and long since buried) on the town’s website itself states otherwise.

On June 13, 2011, under the headline, “Town Website needs improvement – Task Force Being Formed,” Mr. Feiner said that in response to months of complaints from residents that the town website was difficult to navigate,  “I have asked Town Clerk Judith Beville to head up a task force to improve the website.”  He then asked if residents had any “comments or suggestions,”  they should contact him and Ms. Beville.…..

Please Read More Here:

https://edgemontecc.com/2015/03/22/town-clerk-says-dont-blame-her-for-towns-poor-website/

PATCH: Massage Parlors Under Scrutiny in Greenburgh

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A proposed law to regulate the establishments is meeting resistance, according to attorney and community advocate Bob Bernstein.

In recent years, the number of massage parlors in Greenburgh has grown, a move that has many in the community upset because they claim the establishments are brothels merely posing as massage parlors.

The Journal News reports that some officials and residents are trying to take matters into their own hands by passing strict legislation to regulate the establishments. But according to one local attorney and community advocate, the matter is being met with some resistance.

On The Edgemont Community Council website, group president and local attorney Bob Bernstein writes that a proposal to regulate such businesses is being opposed by Town Attorney Tim Lewis and Town Clerk Judith Beville, namely because Lewis questions whether local jurisdictions can regulate the businesses under New York State laws…..

Please Read More Here:

http://patch.com/new-york/tarrytown/massage-parlors-under-scrutiny-greenburgh-0

DAILY VOICE: Uncontested Races Retain Incumbents In Greenburgh, Ardsley

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Incumbency is alive and well in the Town of Greenburgh, where the 24-year town supervisor and his entire board was reelected on Tuesday unopposed.

The same held true in three of the six villages within the Town of Greenburgh on Tuesday: Voters in Ardsley, Dobbs Ferry and Irvington all elected village officials who ran unopposed this fall…..

…Also in the town of Greenburgh, Town Clerk Judith Beville, a Democrat, ran unopposed; as did three Democratic candidates for Town Justice: Arlene Oliver, Delores Brathwaite and Walter Rivera…..

Please Read More Here:

http://greenburgh.dailyvoice.com/politics/uncontested-races-retain-incumbents-in-greenburgh-ardsley/601367/

WCBS: Greenburgh Town Hall To Be Open Sunday For Gay Marriage Licenses, Ceremonies

Gay Marriage (file / credit: DANIEL KFOURI/AFP/Getty Images)

Greenburgh town supervisor Paul Feiner says it’s a moment in history.

Gay couples in New York have waited for the right to marry and so Sunday, he realizes, is a meaningful day.

Therefore, the town hall will be open to approve and perform ceremonies….

…They’re asking couples planning to do so to contact the town clerk by phone at 914-993-1500 or e-mail at townclerk@greenburghny.com ahead of time.

Right now, the plan is to make licenses available until 2:00 p.m., but that could change with demand.

http://newyork.cbslocal.com/2011/07/20/greenburgh-town-hall-to-be-open-sunday-for-gay-marriage-licenses-ceremonies/

MID HUDSON NEWS: Over a dozen same-sex couples tie the knot in Westchester

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TOWN OF GREENBURGH – It was all smiles and wedding bells Sunday afternoon in the Town of Greenburgh as some of the first legally recognized same-sex marriages in the Hudson Valley were performed at the Greenburgh Town Hall by Town Clerk Judith Beville.

Beville opened the clerk’s office at noon and preformed ceremonies while on her day off Sunday afternoon….

Please Read More Here:

http://midhudsonnews.com/News/2011/July/25/MarEq_WC-25Jul11.html

7.. Notes

This Ratings Page Has Been Updated With  Additional Information

About Greenburgh, New York

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Greenburgh is a town in the western part of Westchester County, New York, United States. The population was 88,400 at the 2010 census.

The Romer-Van Tassel House served as the first town hall from 1793 into the early 19th century. It was added to the National Register of Historic Places in 1994. Other locations on the National Register are the Church of St. Joseph of Arimathea and Odell House. The Spanish American War Monument to the 71st Infantry Regiment in Mount Hope Cemetery was listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 2011…..

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

Zip code: 10607

 

Population: 88,400 (2010)

Village of Elmsford – Fran LeFevre – Under Review

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Mixed Results In Elmsford, New York

1. Freedom Of Information Compliance And Knowledge Ratings:

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Under Review – Mixed Response – some freedom of information requests quickly answered and other freedom of information requests dating back to June have been ignored.

Village of Elmsford Clerk Fran LeFevre seems to be disorganized and not very good at records management.

2. Email Address For Filing FOI Requests

franlefevre@elmsfordny.org

3, Mailing Address For Filing FOI Requests

Town Clerk
15 South Stone Avenue
Elmsford, NY 15023

4. Experience:

Fran LeFevre did not respond to a request for a brief biographical paragraph outlining her experience and education.

We have been unable to learn if Ms. LeFevre has benefited from higher education or earned certifications in here chosen career.

Village Administrator Michael C. Mills joined the Village of Elmsford in November 2002 as the Village’s first Village Administrator.

Mr. Mills is a graduate of the University of Louisville in Kentucky.

Prior to coming to Elmsford Mr. Mills’ governmental experiences include serving as the Executive Director of the Office of Community Development for the City of Kingston, New York, where he was born.

Mr. Mills also previously served five years as a Member of the Kingston City Schools Consolidated Board of Education.

 

As well as a 9 year stint as Village Manager of the Village of Ellenville, New York.

Mr. Mills and his wife Janice have two children, Nicholas and Samantha.

5. From The Village Website:

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Village Administrator / Village Clerk

Contact:
Village Administrator
Village Clerk
Deputy Village Clerk
Village Registrar (Death and Birth Records)
Address:
15 South Stone Avenue
Elmsford, NY 15023
Village Hall Phone:
914-592-6555
Village Hall Fax:
914-592-8129
Hours:
Monday – Friday : 9:00AM – 5 PM
Additional Links:

What is the role of the Village Administrator?

The Village Administrator is appointed by the Mayor and Board of Trustee. He oversees that the rules, regulations, local laws and codes of the Village, and all other governmental jurisdictions as applicable, are fairly and efficiently administered. Supervises and coordinates the day to day activities of all Village departments. Recommends to the Mayor and Board of Trustees appointments, promotions or dismissals of all Village employees in accordance with applicable statutes. Represents the Village in collective negotiations with employees. Acts as budget officer in preparation of the tentative budget and oversees the implementation of the Village Budget. Supervises the purchase of all materials, supplies and equipment and the letting of all contracts. Makes recommendations to the Mayor and Board of measures and programs to help improve the efficiency and economy of Village government or promote the health, safety and welfare of the residents of the Village. Maintains a liaison with other governments and administrative agencies as a representative of the Village. Investigates and responds to inquiries by Village residents and other interested persons concerning Village government operations and services. Attends all meetings of the Board of Trustees, preparing all Board agendas and assembling all relevant information regarding agenda items for review by the Mayor and Board of Trustees. Serves as the public information officer of the Village. Serves as the principal grants person for the Village. Discharges such other duties and responsibilities as may be assigned by the Mayor and Board of Trustees.

6. Media Reports / Related Pages

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JOURNAL NEWS: Former Elmsford cop faces shoplifting charges

A former Elmsford police officer who retired amid controversy in 2010 is facing a shoplifting charge for allegedly leaving a Greenburgh supermarket without paying for more than $400 worth of groceries.

Mark Danuff, 48, of Greenburgh, was arrested in November and charged with petty larceny,

Danuff was forced to stop working in May 2010 after a police investigation into alleged misconduct involving the removal of items from a commercial property. He then used sick and vacation time for three months until his retirement, reaching 20 years of service that allowed him to qualify for a regular pension.

No misconduct was ever proven and Danuff was never charged criminally or administratively.

Village officials insisted they had no basis to punish Danuff. His use of accrued time was typical of how many municipal employees wind down their careers, they said.

On the afternoon of October 8, a store manager confronted Danuff in the parking lot of Stop & Shop on White Plains Road after an employee told her the ex-cop had left the store without paying for groceries worth $428, according to a police report.

When the manager asked if Danuff had a receipt, he showed her an old receipt and then told her his wife was still in the store. He then left the groceries with the manager, got in his car and drove off, she told police.

The manager, who took photos of the car and got Danuff’s license plate number, did not want to press charges but wanted him banned from the store. But store security officials later notified police that they did want an arrest made…..

…The probe did not result in charges, but village officials negotiated a separation agreement with Danuff in late May. He did not return to work but remained on the payroll until early September by using 64 of his 85 accrued sick and vacation days.

That allowed him to reach 20 years of service and qualify for a $50,316 annual pension.

Had he left before September 2010, Danuff’s pension would have been lower and he would have had to wait until age 55 to start collecting it. By reaching 20 years of service, he will collect more than $600,000 in pension payments by the time he’s 55.

The village provided the agreement in response to a Freedom of Information request. But two lines that referenced the probe were redacted, with Village Administrator Michael Mills citing privacy concerns….

http://www.lohud.com/story/news/2015/12/25/elmsford-cop-face-shoplifting/77825724/

DAILY VOICE: Village Of Elmsford Makes It Official With Swearing-In Ceremony

The Village of Elmsford held its 103rd organizational meeting Monday at Village Hall as Mayor Robert Williams and other elected and appointed officials were sworn into office.

Williams, Trustees Michael Eannazzo and Sydney Henry Jr., Village Justice Judge Richard Leone and Deputy Mayor Edward Rush were sworn in during the ceremony Monday.

Village Clerk Fran LeFevre officiated at the swearing-in ceremonies as family and residents looked on. The Village Board then approved a number of Mayoral and Trustee appointments.

http://greenburgh.dailyvoice.com/politics/village-of-elmsford-makes-it-official-with-swearing-in-ceremony/572766/

NY TIMES: More Noise on the Library Front

LIBRARIES are usually quiet places. But in Greenburgh, a noisy debate over money and a library expansion broke the silence months ago.

For seven years, Elmsford, a semiautonomous village in the Town of Greenburgh with no library of its own, paid for its residents to use the Greenburgh Public Library. But when the most recent contract was about to expire five months ago, negotiations over a new deal grew testy.

Elmsford, which paid about $258,000 for library services in the 2005-6 fiscal year, wanted to keep paying that rate. But library trustees pushed for a roughly 30 percent increase, hoping to put Elmsford on par with what Town of Greenburgh residents were paying.

When the negotiations soured, Elmsford filed a lawsuit challenging the legality of a planned renovation and expansion of the library, set to break ground next month. Elmsford officials said the lawsuit, since dismissed, was not a negotiating ploy. But trustees cried foul, and an already tense relationship worsened.

A short-term extension of the old contract, at a slightly higher rate, kept services in place through September. Then, last month, Elmsford agreed to a four-and-a-half-year contract with nearby Ardsley Public Library at a rate of $258,000 a year. Because anyone holding a card from any Westchester public library can use the 38 libraries in the Westchester Library System, Elmsford residents can continue to use Greenburgh.

The deal stunned Greenburgh library officials.

“It was just such arrogant, miserable, uncooperative, litigious, obstructionist behavior,” said Susan Wolfert, vice president of Greenburgh library’s board.

Michael Mills, the Elmsford village administrator, said it was unreasonable for Greenburgh to ask for a substantial increase in annual fees when the library planned to operate out of temporary quarters during the expansion project.

But the fight is not over.

Siobahn A. Reardon, director of the Westchester Library System, said the Elmsford-Ardsley agreement seemed to run afoul of the libraries’ “code of service.” The code allows libraries to sign service contracts with “contiguous” areas. Ms. Reardon said the libraries had always defined “contiguous” as adjacent. Elmsford and Ardsley do not share a border…..

Please Click On Times Logo To Read More Here:

WESTCHESTER MAGAZINE: Cracking the Case on the Elmsford Morning Siren

Q: I have lived in Elmsford for two years and am inquiring about the loud sirens that go off every morning at 8 am and periodically throughout the day. I am not a complainer, as I use it as a backup should my own alarm clock fail in the morning, but I was always interested in the genesis/meaning of the siren. —Eric Gerringer, Elmsford

A: Nationalized healthcare? Whatever. Cash for old cars? Boring! In Westchester, we do social programs right. And that’s why, Eric, Elmsford has sounded the town alarm clock every morning since before 1910. Because, as they say, ‘Elmsford—the village that never sleeps…past 8 am.’
April Fool! Did we get ya? No? Next year, then. So, you’re not hearing things. The sound to which you refer, according to Elmsford Village Administrator Michael C. Mills, is an 8 am daily test of the Elmsford Fire Department siren……

Please Read More Here:

http://www.westchestermagazine.com/Westchester-Magazine/April-2013/Cracking-the-Case-on-the-Elmsford-Morning-Siren/

DAILY VOICE: Elmsford School Board President Matthew R.C. Evans Steps Down

….Mayor Robert Williams, who has a daughter in the ninth grade at Alexander Hamilton Jr./Sr. High School, praised Evans’ capabilities.

“As a board member, he brought in the right people that we needed to give the best education to our students,” he said.

Superintendent Dr. Joseph Ricca also spoke about Evans’ positive contribution to the board…..

http://greenburgh.dailyvoice.com/schools/elmsford-school-board-president-steps-down/664788/

7. Notes

This Ratings Page Has Been Updated With Additional Information

About Elmsford, New York

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Elmsford is a village in Westchester County, New York, United States. It is part of the New York metropolitan area. Roughly one mile square, the village is fully contained within the borders of the town of Greenburgh.

Elmsford was largely farmland throughout its early history. The construction of railroads in the late 19th century brought new prominence to the area, and in 1910 it was incorporated as a village.

The area was known from colonial times as “Storm’s Bridge” and later, “Hall’s Corners”, names derived from the principal landowners of the times. In 1870, the growing village was officially renamed “Elmsford” in honor of a local landmark, a giant elm tree (since deceased). The names Elmsford and Storm’s Bridge are reminders of the nearby Saw Mill River, which once had significant tributaries flowing through the village.

Revolutionary War hero Isaac Van Wart is buried at the colonial-era cemetery of the Dutch Reformed Church (Rte. 9A). In 1780, Van Wart and fellow militiamen John Paulding and David Williams captured the British spy Major John André, a crucial informant to Benedict Arnold. The village still has streets named for each of the three patriots.

A longstanding legend holds that Elmsford is the birthplace of the term “cocktail“. According to the tale, a local colonial tavern (sometimes said to be established by town father Isaac Storm) had run out of wooden stirrers during the war and started using the quills of roosters‘ tailfeathers to stir their drinks; a more embellished version holds that the roosters were plundered from nearby Tory farmers.

Much of Elmsford developed around the New York and Putnam Railroad station, with train service beginning in the 1870s. Commuter rail service ended in 1958, and freight service ended in 1975. The railroad bed is now the South County Trailway and North County Trailway. The train station building is now a restaurant.

The Elmsford Reformed Church and Cemetery was listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 1983.

As of the census of 2010, there were 4664 people, 1,618 households, and 1101 families residing in the village. The population densitywas 4306 people per square mile (1,641.3/km²). There were 1618 housing units at an average density of 1,585.9 per square mile (610.0/km²).

There were 1,618 households out of which 32.0% had children under the age of 18 living with them, 47.5% were married couples living together, 13.2% had a female householder with no husband present, and 32.0% were non-families. 25.5% of all households were made up of individuals and 6.8% had someone living alone who was 65 years of age or older. The average household size was 2.88 and the average family size was 3.39.

The village population was spread out with 22.1% under the age of 18, 12.8% from 18 to 24, 33.5% from 25 to 44, 24.4% from 45 to 64, and 10.8% who were 65 years of age or older. The median age was 35.1 years. Males make up 50.9% of the population while women make up 49.1% of the population

The racial makeup of the village was 46.4%% White, 20.5% African American, 0.6% Native American, 10.5% Asian, 0% Pacific Islander, 18.0% from other races, and 4.1% from two or more races. Hispanic or Latino of any race were 38.0% of the population.

The median income for a household in the village was $74,069, and the median income for a family was $84,698. Males had a median income of $43,649 versus $41,356 for females. The per capita income for the village was $32,448. About 8.58% of families and 10.86% of the population were below the poverty line….

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

Zip code: 10523

Population: 4,780 (2013)

Area code 914

More Info On Elmsford, New York

Residents prize Elmsford for its central location. The village, part of the town of Greenburgh, is around 25 miles from Manhattan, with easy accessibility to the New York State Thruway, Interstate 287, the Sprain Brook and Saw Mill River parkways and the Tappan Zee Bridge. White Plains is minutes away, as are the amenities of Irvington, Dobbs Ferry and Tarrytown.

The many highways have a downside, however, as truck traffic can back up through the village along Route 9A. The village recently added traffic-safety features and lighting, among other improvements, to its downtown, which includes many independently owned establishments along Routes 9A and 119.

Initially named Storm’s Bridge and later Hall’s Corners, for prominent residents, the area was renamed Elmsford in 1870 in honor of a massive elm tree that dated to the Revolutionary War era.

Historic structures include the Elmsford Reformed Church, built in 1793. It has an adjacent cemetery with graves of Revolutionary War veterans.

Elmsford doesn’t have a Metro-North station, but residents who commute into Manhattan can take buses or drive to nearby train stations in Irvington or White Plains. The ride to Grand Central Terminal from Irvington, which is around 4 miles from Elmsford, takes 40 minutes.

A handful of hotels can be found within the village, as well as industrial and commercial parks. Much of the Knollwood Country Club, with pools, a clubhouse, a golf course and dining, also lies within Elmsford.

Despite its small size, the village is served by three school districts: Elmsford, Greenburgh Central and Valhalla.

Elmsford’s population is diverse—46% of residents are white, 20% are black and 10% Asian, according to 2010 census data.

Parks: Massaro Park, on Cabot Avenue, is a Greenburgh town park with pools, tennis courts and a ball field. The Stone Barns Center for Food and Agriculture, a working farm with hiking trails and educational programs, is in nearby Pocantico Hills.

Schools: According to state data, 83% of students who entered high school in Elmsford in 2009 met or exceeded state standards for proficiency in English Language Arts and 90% in math four years later, compared with statewide results of 81% and 84% for English and math, respectively.

The Roman Catholic Our Lady of Mount Carmel School has classes from prekindergarten through eighth grade.

Dining: The 38-year-old Pete’s Saloon & Restaurant is on West Main Street. Casaletto Ristorante, on South Central Avenue, serves Italian cuisine. The Eldorado Diner is also on West Main.

Shopping: Small shops and services, including bakeries, delis and pharmacies, can be found along Routes 119 and 9A. Additional shopping can be found in nearby White Plains.

Entertainment: The Westchester Broadway Theatre offers plays and concerts. The Westchester Skating Academy provides public ice skating, lessons and hockey.