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)

Pelham Town Clerk – Colleen Walsh – 2 Stars

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Colleen Walsh

1. Freedom Of Information Compliance And Knowledge Ratings:

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Pelham Town Clerk Colleen Walsh has failed to provided a response to all of our Freedom of Information Requests for access to public documents under New York States FOI laws.

It appears that Colleen Walsh doesn’t know how to respond to a simple FOI request for access to a public document. After many written and phone inquiries the town had the attorney listed bellow to respond to our FOI request for the town clerk’s compensation.

While it is good that after nine days we finially got a copy of the current budget with Ms. Walsh’s pay listed, it is bad that the honest hard working taxpayers had to pay for a Manhattan attorney to do Ms. Walsh’s job for her.

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Thomas Richard Kleinberger, Esq
411 Fifth Avenue, 9th Floor
New York, New York 10016
(917) 326-5523 (Telephone)
(917) 326-5525 (Fax)
tkleinberger@adamsre.com

But the attorney for the town attorney is very temperamental. When we emailed a FOIL of his invoices to the town.

We wanted to learn just how much Pelham’s attorney was was pocketing in fees due to Ms. Walsh’s incompetence when it came to responding to FOI requests for documents.

In less than an hour of getting a Freedom of information request for copies of any invoices from the Pelham Town Attorney responded to the email saying,”In future any FOIL requests will only be addressed by the Town if in  a physical writing (i.e. a letter).

We had to to respond to Thomas Kleinberger’s mini meltdown with…..

New York’s courts have repeatedly ruled that every town subject to the Freedom of Information Law, and must accept emailed FOILS provided that it has the ability to receive requests for records from the public and transmit records by means of email, is required to do so.

Some have joked in Pelham that the hussy fit throwing Mr. Kleinberger got his law license at Sears.

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Town Clerk Colleen Walsh was not just unresponsive with us. When the League Of Women Voter’s sent her a questionnaire in the 2015 election she refused to respond.

From The 2015 LWV Voting Guide:

TOWN CLERK – PELHAM Term: 2 years; Salary: $5,500
Candidate: Colleen W. Walsh Party: R, REF
Questions: – no response –

Sadly abuse and corruption can flourish in Pelham and in New York when government officials feel entitled and refuse to follow New York State’s Freedom Of Information statutes that allow taxpayers and the media to bring accountability and transparency to local government.

Pelham Town Clerk Colleen Walsh would have gotten a rating of FAILURE, but Pelham Town Attorney Thomas Richard Kleinberger was able to provide a copy of the 2016 budget listing her pay.

So we are tentatively given Ms. Walsh TWO STARS as we wait to see if Mr. Kleinberger can try not to be so emotional and complete the other open FOIL requests, when he returns from vacation next month.

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However, if we could we give Colleen Walsh the Bubble Headed Bleach Blonde Award, because she need to get TomKleinberger, Esq to complete a simple Freedom Of Information Request asking for her pay as an elected official.

What good is a town clerk that doesn’t have the skill set need to respond to an FOI request for a public document. It is laughable that she uses the email address toptownclerk@aol.com.

2. Email Address For Filing FOI Requests

toptownclerk@aol.com

Or

townclerk@townofpelham.com

3, Mailing Address For Filing FOI Requests:

Town Clerk
34 Fifth Avenue Town Hall
Pelham, New York 10803

4. Experience:

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UNRESPONSIVE: We got no response from Pelham Town Clerk Colleen. Walsh on our information request about her experience.

From the internet we learned Ms. Walsh is a fitness trainer who provides personal training and group fitness classes and has sometimes called her classes,”Sun and Moon Fitness”.

She even made a video called “Strong Mamas/Fit Families”

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=F09pSoOUWq4

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Colleen Walsh

Ms. Walsh apparently has a “Corporate Wellness Coaching” Certificate and a “Holistic Life Coaching” Certificate from some place called the Spencer Center.

Many in Pelham say that Ms. Walsh’s fitness training experience doesn’t give her the experience needed to bring the accountability and transparency that Pelham desperately needs.

Honest hardworking town residents are grossly over taxed and pay too much for often poorly delivered services. This is because they can’t access to the public documents and information they need to bring about real change in the town.

5. From The Pelham Town Website:

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FAILING WEBSITE – GRADE

It looks like that as of the date of this post Town Clerk Colleen Walsh has failed to have the town website updated with the latest information about the Pelham Town Clerk’s Office, which lists another person, Timothy Case, as the Pelham Town Clerk.

The Clueless Ms. Walsh has been the Town Clerk since January 2014, so for 2 years And 7 months she has listed someone else as the Town Clerk on her Town Of Pelham Web Page.

Worse yet the Town’s web Page is not ADA compliant.

The Pelham Town Website Reads:

The Town Clerk is an elected official and serves for a term of two (2) years. The Town Clerk is charged with custody of all legal records, books and papers of the Town and is responsible for the recording of all of the Town Board’s Proceedings and decisions. In this regard, the Town Clerk’s charged with publishing items tobe considered by the Town Board during its meetings and is charged with posting all notices required by law.

The Town Clerk supervises all town wide general elections, primaries related to those elections, conducted in the Town of Pelham pursuant to applicable laws. Applications for absentee ballots, and voter registration forms are available in the Town Clerks Office.

The Town Clerk also serves as Registrar of Vital Statistics, which includes records of Marriages, birth, deed records as early as 1860. Current birth & death records are kept in the Village of Pelham and the Village of Pelham Manor.

The Town Clerk’s office also issues Marriage licenses. It is necessary to make an appointment to obtain a Marriage license.(9:30 AM – 3:30 PM Monday – Friday) Please call (914) 738-0777.

The fee for a Marriage license is $40.00.

Marriage Transcripts are $20.00.

Dog Licenses are available at the Town Clerks Office for Village of Pelham residents. The requirements for the license are (1) Village of Pelham Resident, (2) updated paperwork on dog, which should include current rabies information and proof of neutered/spayed, (3) Owners I.D.

The fee for a dog license is $16.00 (neutered/spayed)

$23.00 (unaltered)

$5.00 for a lost tag.
Click here to print out application.

****Pelham Manor Residents must go to Village of Pelham Manor (Village Clerk at 4 Penfield Place) to acquire a Disabled permit and/or Dog license. If you have any questions please call 914/738-8820.  ****

If you are a new voter, have moved since the last election, or wish to change your registration you may do so by visiting the Town Clerks office.

Timothy Case
Town Clerk

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6. Media Reports

Extra, Extra Read All About It!!!!

Pelham’s Privileged Political Class Wins Again!!!!!!

Only 54 People For For Colleen Wash To Be Town Clerk!!!!

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DAILY VOICE: Pelham Residents Vote For Uncontested Candidates

Voters Tuesday turned out to vote for Pelham supervisor, town clerk, two council seats and receiver of taxes — all of which were uncontested.

With 10 percent of the vote counted at 9:30 p.m. Supervisor Peter DiPaola Jr had 56 votes – 100 percent of all votes cast. DiPaola ran on the Republican line.

Republican Colleen Walsh received 54 votes – 100 percent – for town clerk…..

Please Read More Here:

http://pelham.dailyvoice.com/politics/pelham-residents-vote-for-uncontested-candidates/412525/

7. Notes

This Ratings Page Has Been Updated With Additional Information

About Pelham, New York

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Pelham is an inner-ring suburban town in Westchester County, New York, approximately 14 miles northeast of Midtown Manhattan. As of the 2010 census, it had a population of 12,396.

Historically, Pelham was composed of five villages and became known as “the Pelhams”. Pelham currently contains two independently incorporated villages: the Villages of Pelham and Pelham Manor

Approximately 28 minutes away from Grand Central Terminal by the Metro-North train, Pelham is home to many New York City commuters and has an active social community for its residents.

In 1654, Thomas Pell bought the area within the present-day town from theSiwanoy Indians. He named his manor “Pelham” in honor of his tutor, Pelham Burton.

Pelham was incorporated as a town on March 7, 1788. It included all of City Island and present-day Pelham Bay Park east of the Hutchinson River. In 1895, the town was reduced in size to its current boundaries. In 1891, the village of Pelham Manor incorporated. In 1896, the village of North Pelham and the village of Pelham incorporated. In 1975, the villages of North Pelham and Pelham merged, forming the present village of Pelham. The Village of Pelham and the Village of Pelham Manor share several services such as school and recreational activities.

There is a grassroots movement to continue the consolidation of services in order to reduce taxes.

The Pelham Picture House was added to the National Register of Historic Places in 2010..

Pelham is home to four elementary schools (two located in each village), one middle school, and one high school. The elementary schools are Hutchinson, Colonial, Siwanoy, and Prospect Hill. Pelham Middle School and Pelham Memorial High School gather students for all of Pelham. These are all part of the Pelham Union Free School District. There are also several private and religious based schools. Since 1948, New York City has paid the district to educate children who live in a small strip of land between Pelham and Pelham Bay Park that is part of the Bronx due to a boundary error, as doing so is less expensive than sending school buses there….

Please Read More Here:

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

Village of Bronxville – James M. Palmer – Under Review – Delayed

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James M. Palmer

1. Freedom Of Information Compliance And Knowledge Ratings:

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Under Review – James Palmer has responded to our Bronxville Freedom of Information requests with….

“We are unable to respond to your request at this time. If the information you request is available, we will contact you within 20 business days.”

One of the Freedom of Information requests asked how much was the compensation for his taxpayer funded job.

Really?

LOL – Maybe James Palmer makes so much money off of the taxpayers that it takes him 20 days just to count it up.

2. Email Address For Filing FOI Requests

JPalmer@vobny.com

3, Mailing Address For Filing FOI Requests

Village Clerk
200 Pondfield Rd
Bronxville, NY 10708

4. Experience:

A graduate of St. Michael’s College in Colchester, Vermont, with a degree in business administration and a minor in political science, Palmer earned his master’s degree at the Rockefeller College of Public Affairs and Policy at SUNY Albany.

While still in graduate school, Mr. Palmer entered professional local government management when he accepted a position with Schenectady County Manager Robert McEvoy, former manager for the Town of Rye and assistant city manager of Yonkers.

From Schenectady County, Palmer moved to the Village/Town of Mount Kisco, where he began his 20-year tenure working for the village manager, eventually assuming that position.

With Mount Kisco being one of only five coterminous village/towns in the State of New York, and the only one with separate assessing units, Mr. Palmer served as both village assessor and town assessor.

Mount Kisco, along with Scarsdale and Harrison, are the only three coterminous municipalities in Westchester.

In Bronxville, beyond the administrative aspects of the village administrator’s position, Palmer is involved in the many village projects currently in progress and soon to be initiated. His duties also include serving as the village clerk and the records management officer.

Mr. Palmer got the job after a lengthy search process that com-menced in February. At the end of the previous year, former Village Administrator Harold Porr announced his retirement after 10 years on the job.

The salary for this position is $170,000

Interim Bronxville Village Administrator Donald Marra, who is filling in, was also hired in March to lead the search for Mr. Porr’s replacement.

Soon after completing the administrative search in Bronxville, Mr. Marra was hired away to help the Village of Tuckahoe with its own search for a village administrator, a new position the village is creating.

Rye Brook’s assistant village administrator, David Burke, was eventually hired for the Tuckahoe position.

Mr. Palmer, who is a board member of the state’s City/County Management Association.

Mr. Palmer will remain a resident of Mount Kisco, where he lives with his wife Xann and five-year-old twin daughters Zoe and Siena.

Bronxville is a small village with many wealthy residents.

5. From The Village Website:

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Duties & Responsibilities

The Village Clerk is located on the main floor of Village Hall and is open Monday through Friday from 9AM to 4PM.

The Village Clerk is a public officer and custodian of all public records maintained by the Village. The primary responsibilities of the Village Clerk involve records management, coordination and supervision of Village Elections, and attendance at all official meetings of the Board of Trustees for recording official minutes of the meeting. The Village Clerk is appointed by the Village Board and serves a term of two (2) years. Clerks are not subject to term limits and may be reappointed at the expiration of a term.

The Vital Statistics office is also part of the Village Clerk’s office. The Registrar of Vital Records maintains and issues certified copies of birth and death records of the Village. These records are limited and pertain only to persons who were born in the Village of Bronxville or who actually died within the Village of Bronxville.

The Village Clerk is also the Freedom of Information Officer and processes all requests for records under the Freedom of Information Law.

Through the Village Clerk, Bronxville residents may obtain permanent or temporary handicapped parking permits. The clerk also issues local permits and licenses.

Email the Village Clerk/Deputy Registrar of Vital Statistics

Staff Contacts

Name Title Phone
James M. Palmer JPalmer@vobny.com Administrator/Village Clerk 914-337-6500
Mary Ann Magliato mmagliato@vobny.com Deputy Registrar of Vital Statistics 914-337-6500, x109
Margaret Parr mparr@vobny.com Registrar of Vital Statistics 914-337-6500, Ext 100

6. Media Reports / Related Pages

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MY HOMETOWN BRONXVILLE: James M. Palmer, Mt. Kisco Village Manager, Appointed Bronxville Village Administrator as of June 23

May 14, 2014:  The Bronxville Board of Trustees, in a unanimous vote at its May 12 meeting, affirmed the appointment of James M. Palmer, the current Mount Kisco village manager, as Bronxville village administrator effective June 23. Palmer will succeed Harold Porr, who retired from the position in March, and will assume responsibilities from Donald Marra, who has served as interim village administrator since Porr’s retirement.

Palmer comes to Bronxville with over 20 years of experience in Mount Kisco. Prior to becoming village manager, a position he has held for six years, Palmer served as assistant village manager and tax assessor. He also worked for the village as a building inspector and as human resources manager.

During Palmer’s tenure as village manager, he administered construction of a new village library and directed the conversion of village street lighting from incandescent to LED fixtures…..

Please Read More Here:

http://myhometownbronxville.com/index.php?option=com_content&view=article&id=7007:james-m-palmer-mt-kisco-village-manager-appointed-bronxville-village-administrator-as-of-june-23&catid=5:bronxville-govt-hist&Itemid=5

YONKERS TRIBUNE: Park Avenue Construction Begins in Bronxville 

By Village Administrator JAMES M. PALMER

BRONXVILLE, NY — October 4, 2015 — As you may be aware, the Village has awarded a contract to have a portion of the Park Avenue brick road, between Wellington Circle and Tanglewylde Avenue, restored and to also add additional drainage down Tanglewylde Avenue, where it approaches Midland Avenue. The two month project will commence Monday, October 5, 2015, with the construction of the drainage work on Tanglewylde Avenue to be followed by the reconstruction of Park Avenue. As a result of this work, it will be necessary to have a limited amount of material and equipment stored along Tanglewylde Avenue and Park Avenue. It may also be necessary to have limited through traffic on Tanglewylde Avenue and Park Avenue during certain periods.

Please know that the Village will ensure that the Contractor, Tony Casale Inc., maintains the area in a neat and safe manner throughout the project and fully restores the area upon its completion.

Please do not hesitate to contact me directly should you have any additional questions regarding the project. I can be reached directly at 793-0721.

http://www.yonkerstribune.com/2015/10/park-avenue-construction-begins-in-bronxville-monday-october-5-2015-by-village-administrator-james-m-palmer

PATCH: Palmer Leaving Mount Kisco for Bronxville

Bronxville has hired James Palmer, currently the Village Manager of Mount Kisco, as its new Village Administrator, according to Bronxville Mayor Mary Marvin.

Here’s part of what Marvin wrote about him:

After a very deliberate process, we have chosen James (Jim) M. Palmer as our new Administrator.   Jim has been the Village Manager of Mount Kisco since 2006.  Prior to being elevated to Manager, Jim wore almost every hat in municipal government including the titles of Town and Village Clerk, Assessor, Building Inspector and Human Resources Manager.   In essence, Jim has sat in every seat of those he will be supervising.   

Jim dealt successfully with many of the issues that have also presented themselves here in Bronxville in recent years.  He guided the demolition and then construction of a new library…..

Please Read More Here:

http://patch.com/new-york/chappaqua/palmer-leaving-mount-kisco-for-bronxville

EXAMINER NEWS: Palmer To Leave Mount Kisco Village Manager’s Post

A chapter in Mount Kisco government will come to a close in June, when James Palmer, who has served as village manager for the past six years and has worked for the municipality for nearly two decades, will leave to become village administrator in Bronxville.

Palmer said it was a difficult decision to leave Mount Kisco, where he also lives. Bronxville is one of “a very few communities in Westchester that I would consider leaving for,” he said.

“First and foremost, I think of it always as an honor and a privilege to serve the community,” said Palmer, who starts his new job June 16.

Palmer said he did not actively seek a new job, but the Bronxville opening was “a unique opportunity that came up.” Bronxville is similar in many respects to Mount Kisco, with a vibrant downtown but with some challenges, such as empty storefronts that need to be filled.

He said he planned to continue living locally and take part in community activities after he moves on to his new job. Palmer currently earns a $159,500 salary in Mount Kisco.

Please Read More Here:

http://www.theexaminernews.com/palmer-to-leave-mount-kisco-village-managers-post/

DAILY VOICE: Mount Kisco Village Manager to Leave for Bronxville Post

Mount Kisco Village Manager James Palmer will leave his current post to become the village administrator in Bronxville, according to theexaminernews.com.

Palmer said he didn’t seek out the Bronxville position, but was was drawn to it because of the unique challenges it presents…..

Please Read More Here:

http://mtkisco.dailyvoice.com/news/mount-kisco-village-manager-to-leave-for-bronxville-post/447175/

Bronxville superintendent ‘search’ wastes money: Letter

Re “Bronxville school superintendent search begins,”

I know the school board President Denise Tormey to be a woman of great integrity and surely she means well by hiring an expensive firm to do a national search for a new superintendent.

Having taught in Bronxville for 22 years, however, I can say with 100 percent certainty that the money for the search firm would be much better spent on programs, staff or infrastructure.

This is because the new superintendent will most certainly be the current assistant superintendent, and every person who works in Bronxville knows this. The Bronxville community deserves more and can do better than a preordained successor, so please use the search wisely.

Jeff Zuckerman

Tuckahoe

http://www.lohud.com/story/opinion/readers/2016/07/05/bronxville-superintendent-search-wastes-money-letter/86548020/

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7. Notes

This Ratings Page Has Been Updated With Additional Information

About Bronxville, New York

Image = Bronxville_highlighted.svg

Bronxville is a suburban village in Westchester County, New York, located about 15 miles north of midtown Manhattan. It is part of the town of Eastchester. The village comprises 1 square mile (2.5 km2) of land in its entirety, approximately 20% of the town of Eastchester. As of the 2010 U.S. census, Bronxville had a population of 6,323. As of 2014, it was ranked 18th in the state in median income.

Millionaire real-estate and pharmaceutical mogul William Van Duzer Lawrence sparked the development of Bronxville as an affluent suburb of New York City with magnificent homes in a country-like setting. The area, once known as “Underhill’s Crossing”, became “Bronxville” when the village was formally established. The population grew in the second half of the 19th century when railroads allowed commuters from Westchester County to work in New York City. Lawrence’s influence can be seen throughout the community, including the historicLawrence Park neighborhood, the Houlihan Lawrence Real Estate Corporation, and Lawrence Hospital. John F Kennedy, the president of the United States, also resided here for a time.

The village was home to an arts colony in the early 20th century during which time many noteworthy houses by prominent and casual architects were built. After the Bronx River Parkway was completed in 1925, the Village expanded rapidly with the construction of several apartment buildings and townhouses much of it built by the Lawrence family. As of 1959, they continued to own or manage 97% of the rental market. In both rentals and ownership, the village discouraged and effectively prohibited Jewish residency, earning the name “The Holy Square Mile.”

The Gramatan Hotel on Sunset Hill was a residence hotel in the late 19th century and early 20th century. Gramatan was the name of the chief of the local Siwanoy Indian tribe that was centered in the Gramatan Rock area above Bronxville Station. Chief Gramatan sold the land to the settlers. The hotel was demolished in 1970, and a complex of townhouses was built on the site in 1980. 

Elizabeth Clift Bacon, General George Armstrong Custer‘s widow, lived in Bronxville, and her house still stands to this day.

St. Joseph’s Catholic Church, located in the downtown area, was attended by the Kennedys when they were residents from 1929 to about 1936. In 1958 future-senator Ted Kennedy married Joan Bennett in St. Joseph’s Church. In 1960, the Village voted 5:1 for Nixon over Kennedy.

The US Post Office–Bronxville was listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 1988. Other sites on the National Register are the Bronxville Women’s Club,Lawrence Park Historic District, and Masterton-Dusenberry House..

Bronxville’s 10708 ZIP code covers the village of Bronxville proper, plus Chester Heights and other sections of Eastchester, parts of Tuckahoe, and Lawrence Park West, Cedar Knolls, Armour Villa, and other sections of Yonkers. This brings the ZIP code’s population to 22,411 (2000 census), covering an area more than twice as large as the municipality of Bronxville itself and encompassing several notable institutions, such as Sarah Lawrence College in Yonkers. In fact, there are more residents of Yonkers using a Bronxville mailing address than living in the village itself. The Bronxville Post Office serves residents of the village…..

Please Read More Here:

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

Zip code: 10708

Population: 6,403 (2013)

Colleges and Universities: Sarah Lawrence College, Concordia College

Bronxville Trivia

  • Bronxville has 2,300 addresses in the Village but over 10,000 people use Bronxville as their postal address.
  • In 1898, at the time of its incorporation as a Village, Bronxville had 300 citizens.
  • Sixty percent of our residents live in single-family homes and townhouses while 40 percent reside in apartments, co-ops and condominiums.
  • In the most recent census, ethnicity in the Village was 20 percent Irish, 11 percent Italian, 11 percent German and 10 percent English, with all other nationalities below double digits.
  • Per the same census, the Village has 3,358 female residents vs 3,060 male.
  • Twenty percent of the land in the Village is tax exempt.
  • The Bronx River was actually re-routed and the Village border changed to accommodate the construction of the Bronx River Parkway.
  • There are 1,356 parking meters in our Village and they all work. (Most days!)
  • The Village has over 70 acres of parkland.
  • The original soil at the Alfredo Fields, near Siwanoy Country Club, was sold and trucked to Queens for the World’s Fair in 1939.
  • Scout Field, both upper and lower, are Westchester County parkland with over 95 percent of the actual field areas in the cities of Yonkers and Mount Vernon.
  • Bronxville residents pay more in property taxes to Westchester County (approximately $8 million per year) than they do to run Village government.
  • With the exception of the Hasidic village of Kiryas Joel in Orange County, Bronxville is the only other community that is co-terminous with their school district and has the municipality issues both School and Village tax bills.
  • When United Water or Con Edison needs to do repairs underground, it is their responsibility to repave and repair the disrupted surfaces. Of late, repairs seem to take much longer because the work is now subcontracted out to different entities.
  • Homeowners are responsible for the care, maintenance and replacement of sidewalks abutting their property. The Village is responsible for road maintenance.
  • According to a Con Edison study, the cost to relocate the overhead electrical lines in Bronxville would be approximately $62 million. In addition, there would be a charge to connect individual homes which would average between $18,000–$25,000 per dwelling. If the overhead lines from the feeder substations that run through adjoining communities are not buried as well, Bronxville would still lose power if the lines are hit.
  • Crews from the Village Department of Public Works cannot remove tree branches or debris near a wire until Con Edison has determined the wire is not live and poses no danger.
  • Our police department offers many ancillary services to residents including:
    • security survey of homes or businesses to assess vulnerabilities and suggest ways to increase security
    • a vacant house check for residents on vacation
    • a key file service allowing homeowners to keep a key at the police department for emergencies
    • the assistance of officers who are certified infant seat technicians to inspect or install car seats

All of these services can be requested by calling the police desk at 914-337-0500.

  • As part of their duties, police officers report all non-working street lights. If a light remains out for several days, it means there is an electrical issue requiring assistance from Con Edison.
  • Kevlar police vests last only five years. Then the fibers start to decompose.
  • A 14-year-old providing alcohol to a 20-year-old can still be charged with the crime of providing alcohol to a minor.
  • The New York State Vehicle and Traffic Law sets the minimum speed of 30 mph for villages. It can be lowered only with evidence of exceptional circumstances such as a designated school zone or proof that an area has a history of multiple serious accidents caused by conditions particular to that stretch of road.
  • In 1960, villagers voted 5:1 for Richard Nixon over former resident John F. Kennedy
  • The Village has no County-owned roads and only one State road, Route 22. It is only Route 22 that cannot be repaved or upgraded by the Village’s capital plan. If you notice, the state built Route 22 in Bronxville with no catch basins adding to our flooding issues.
  • In 1934, 301 babies were born at Lawrence Hospital. Last year, the total reached over 2,500. Village government is responsible for the production of their birth certificates.
  • Palumbo Place is named for Joe Palumbo the long time Village Public Works Director. Leonard Morange Park, on the west side, is named after the first Village resident to die in service of our country in World War I.
  • Famous people who called the Village home included John F. Kennedy, Eddie Rickenbacker, Beat writer Lawrence Ferlinghetti, Baseball Commissioner Ford Frick, Elizabeth Custer, Jack Paar and Marvin Bower.