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 of Croton-on-Hudson – Pauline DiSanto – Under Review

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Pauline DiSanto, Has Not Yet Sent In Her Photo

1. Freedom Of Information Compliance And Knowledge Ratings:

Under Review: The very highly compensated Village of Croton-on-Hudson Clerk Pauline DiSanto claims to need more than a month to respond to the same freedom of Information requests that most clerks responded to and completed in less than a week.

There appears to be a good reason that Croton-on-Hudson taxpayers have often complained to Village Manager Jamie King and Chiropractor / Mayor Mayor Dr. Greg Schmidt about the lack of accountability and transparancy in their community.

The Village of Croton-on-Hudson, New York is a small very high taxed village in the northern suburbs of New York City, with a population of about 8,000 people and an area of less than five square miles.

Image Greg Schmidt Croton On Hudson 711
Mayor Greg Schmidt

Residents Are Gravely Concerned About The Village Debt That Was Unanimously Increased By 33% By The Board Of Trustees

Sadly, the current spending levels are unsustainable and the priorities, if any, are misplaced – the single family homeowners of Croton-on-Hudson are often frustrated in getting the public documents they need from Village of Croton-on-Hudson Clerk Pauline DiSanto to advocate for changes their community needs.

Dr. Gregory Schmidt, a Democrat, is a local chiropractor, he and his wife, Susan. Dr. Schmidt has served three terms as a Croton Village Trustee and two terms as Mayor.

During Dr. Gregory Schmidt’s tenures, he repeatedly failed to bring instrumental improvments and departmental efficiencies to the village clerk’s office.

Dr. Schmidt spends a lot of his time as a key organizer of ‘Summerfest’ and Rotary’s classic car show as the village taxes have increased and increased and increased on his watch.

Deputy Mayor Bob Anderson, along with his wife, Leslie live in Croton-on-Hudon. A 1972 graduate from SUNY-New Paltz, Mr. Anderson taught school for a bit. but he left teaching to spend several years as a tennis professional at clubs around Westchester.

In 1983, Mr. Anderson joined IBM Research as a designer of laboratory and office space. He later served as an executive assistant to an executive recruiter.

Deputy Mayor Bob Anderson just doesn’t seem to have the skill set needed to bring efficiency, accountability and transparency to  Village of Croton-on-Hudson Clerk Pauline DiSanto’s office.

The single family homeowners of Croton-On-Hudson Deserve better than this

2. Email Address For Filing FOI Requests

pdisanto@crotononhudson-ny.gov

3, Mailing Address For Filing FOI Requests

Town Clerk
1 Van Wyck Street
Croton-on-Hudson, NY 10520

4. Experience:

Pauline DiSanto refused to provide a short biographical paragraph and photo. We are unsure if Ms. Disanto has benefited from higher education or received certifications in her field of study.

5. From The Village Website:

Image = croton-on-hudson-website header 74

Quick Links
Election Information:
Other
Applications & Forms

6. Media Reports / Related Pages

FIND THE DATA: Pauline DiSanto Salaries

2011 $89,004

2013 $90,858

http://state-employees.findthedata.com/d/a/Pauline-DiSanto

New Deputy Clerk Appointment

…..WHEREAS, from time to time it is necessary for the Clerk to be away from the office and  it is advisable that someone be authorized to perform the duties of the Clerk at such times; and

WHEREAS, the Village Clerk, Pauline DiSanto has recommended that Kristine Gilligan be appointed Deputy Village Clerk.

NOW, THEREFORE BE IT RESOLVED:  that the Village Board of Trustees hereby appoints Kristine Gilligan to be the Deputy Village Clerk, who shall have full authority to exercise and perform any of the powers and duties of the Clerk effective January 6, 2009,

AND BE IT FURTHER RESOLVED:  that this appointment will fill the unexpired term vacated by Genette Toone which ends April 6, 2009,

AND BE IT FURTHER RESOLVED:  that the Village Board of Trustees hereby sets the Deputy Clerk Kristine Gilligan’s annual salary at $42,000….

http://crotononhudson-ny.gov/Public_Documents/CrotonHudsonNY_WebDocs/AgendaRes/010509/resf

7. Notes

This Ratings Page Has Been Updated With Additional Information

About Croton-on-Hudson, New York

Image = Croton-on-Hudson_highlighted.svg

Croton-on-Hudson is a village in Westchester County, New York, United States. The population was 8,070 at the 2010 census. It is located in the town of Cortlandt, in New York City’s northern suburbs. The village was incorporated in 1898.

Clifford Harmon, a realtor, purchased 550 acres of land next to the village of Croton in 1903. He gave part of the land to the New York Central Railroad to build a train station, on the condition that the station would forever be named after him. Today it is called theCroton-Harmon station of the Metro-North Railroad. In 1906, the station became a major service facility for the railroad. The station expanded even further in 1913, when it became the stop at which electric trains from New York City switched to steam engines…..

Croton-on-Hudson’s economy has historically thrived on the Metro North train station that up until 1968 served as the point at which northbound trains would exchange their electric engines for other modes of conveyance. During those days, the train station and its super-adjacent area was known as Harmon. Because maintenance of diesel and steam engines was then very labor-intensive, there were many workers whose needs were served by abundant service businesses, such as restaurants and bars. Because of the separate development of both the Harmon and the Mt. Airy communities, there were originally two commercial districts—one centered on Grand Street, and the other in Harmon—though in recent years the two have merged into a single sprawling commercial district. There is also a North Riverside commercial district serving communities along Riverside Drive, Brook Street, Grand Street, and Bank Street.

After the New York Central Railroad folded, Croton-on-Hudson’s economy slowly stagnated. Although Croton-Harmon station still served as the main transfer point northbound between local and express trains, the laborers who had earlier fueled a bustling service economy were no longer present in Harmon. The exodus of labor during the early 1970s was compounded by thestagflation that was a result of higher oil prices and skyrocketing interest rates.

There has been an ongoing effort since the early 1990s to develop the riverfront for recreational use. Among the accomplishments are a pedestrian bridge spanning U.S. Route 9 and NY 9A between the lower village and Senasqua Park, the Crossiningpedestrian footbridge across the Croton River, the bicycle trail extensions around Half Moon Bay Condominiums, rehabilitation of the “Picture Tunnel” (repaving and closing it to cars), and acquisition and clearing of the Croton Landing property. In addition,Croton Point Park is also along the riverfront…..

Please Read More Here:

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Croton-on-Hudson,_New_York

Area: 10.81 mi²

Elevation: 164′

Population: 8,206 (2013)
Area code: 914

Village of Dobbs Ferry – Liz Dreaper – Under Review

Image = Village of Dobbs Ferry - Liz Dreaper 74

Liz Dreaper

1. Freedom Of Information Compliance And Knowledge Ratings:

Under Review – No response to date – FOI acknowledgements are past due.

Image = Head-In-The-Sand
Unresponsive Village Clerk Liz Dreaper
Can’t Hear Taxpayers Seeking Public
Information In Dobbs Ferry

Now in his second term Mayor Hartley Connett has repeatedly failed to bring accountability and transparency to the village clerk’s office

The single family home owners of Dobbs Ferry are constantly being frustrated in seeking seek public records as, the village assessment rolls are declining more and more each year as employee retirement and health contributions increase.

Small businesses frustrated with the lack of accountability and fairness are leaving downtown areas—yet Dobbs Ferry residents can’t get the public documents they need to come up with solutions to lower taxes.

Sadly only the taxpayer funded privileged political class in Dobb Ferry seems to be the only ones benefiting from lack of accountability and transparency in the village clerks office. All three candidates for Dobbs Ferry village trustee ran unopposed: Republican Victor Golio Jr. and Democrats Vincent Rossillo and Anna Lisa Corrales.

Dobbs Ferry employs about 113 people and its annual operating budget is approximate $17 million, but it is difficult to get Village of Dobbs Ferry Clerk Liz Dreaper to release total employee compensation figures for elected and public figures.

Liz Dreaper failed to respond to our freedom of information request seeking public documents about her salery, benefits and penson cost to taxpayers.

2. Email Address For Filing FOI Requests

ldreaper@dobbsferry.com

3, Mailing Address For Filing FOI Requests

Village Clerk
112 Main St.
Dobbs Ferry, NY 10522

4. Experience:

Ms. Dreaper did not respond to a request for a short biographical paragraph, but we found the following on the internet.

Village Clerk
Village of Dobbs Ferry
– Present

Unknown
1992 – 2003

Security Guard
Coastal Carolina Community College


Unknown
1983 – 1991

Radio Operator
Marine Corps

5. From The Village Website:

image = Dobbs-Ferry-seal-blue-74

The Clerk’s Office, located in Village Hall, is open Monday through Friday from 8:30 a.m. to 4:00 p.m.

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

At meetings of the Board of Trustees, the Village Clerk serves as Clerk of the Board and keeps records of the meetings. The Clerk is responsible for preparing and preserving the minutes of their meetings. In addition, the Clerk compiles a record of all Village resolutions and local laws.

The Clerk’s Office issues various licenses and permits including: annual parking permits for the business district, handicapped permits, peddler’s permits, sidewalk café permits, film permits and taxi licenses/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 the Public Access Information Officer and processes all requests for records under the Freedom of Information Law.

The Village Clerk also provides tax records, collection of taxes and is a Notary Public.

Village Election Information

Village Elections are held every year on the first Tuesday in November, (Election Day). Elected positions include Mayor (1), (2-year term), Trustee (6), (2-year terms), and Village Justice (1), 4-year term.

Voter Registration forms and absentee ballots are available from the Village Clerk, but must be sent to the Westchester County Board of Elections for processing. Completed forms may not be sent to Village Hall. Forms are also available online at the Board of Elections website. Polling Places are open 6:00am – 9:00pm on Election Day. To confirm your polling place, call the Board of Elections at: 914-995-5700.

6. Media Reports / Related Pages

DAILY VOICE: Dobbs Ferry – How Does Your Village Work?

….As reported , a recent Dobbs Ferry Board of Trustees meeting involved heated debate over Mercy College’s future development plans. Dobbs Ferry resident Sue Sussman made a statement, which was followed by Mercy College representative William S. Null, who rattled off traffic statistics. Sussman stood up and directly challenged the legitimacy of Null’s statistics.

“It does get out of control sometimes,” said Village Clerk Liz Dreaper. “It’s more of the chairman’s [decision] to put a limitation on it.”….

Please Read More Here:

http://rivertowns.dailyvoice.com/news/dobbs-ferry-how-does-your-village-work/429319/

JOURNAL NEWS: Dobbs Ferry approves police contract after 3 years

Village police who have been working without a contract for more than three years now have an agreement that was approved Tuesday and goes into effect immediately.

The agreement calls for police to receive an 11.75 percent pay increase over five years. It also lowers initial starting pay of new officers and calls for newly hired police to pay more for health insurance.

“It took a long time because we were looking as a village to offer a competitive compensation program for our officers and at the same time we recognized the need for an agreement that is affordable for taxpayers,” said Mayor Hartley Connett.

The contract runs from retroactively from June 2012 until May 2017. The village has 25 police officers. The police budget is $4.2 million of Dobbs Ferry’s $16 million total budget……

Please Read More Here:

http://www.lohud.com/story/news/local/2015/11/25/dobbs-ferry-approves-police-contract/76313086/

PATCH: Dobbs Ferry Seeks Village Administrator

Dobbs Ferry is advertising for a Village Administrator to replace Marcus Serrano, who resigned in June.

The position is currently posted on the village website, and calls for candidates who have “at least seven years of experience in public administration.” Additionally, the village considers it a plus if the candidate have “experience in strategic and financial planning, performance measurements, and union negotiations.”

Currently, the position is being filled on an interim basis by Police Chief Betsy Gelardi, who is also a member of a search committee the village has established to help find a permanent replacement…..

http://patch.com/new-york/rivertowns/dobbs-ferry-seeks-village-administrator-0

PATCH: What You Need To Know What Is the Dobbs Ferry Party?

Mayor Hartley Connett describes the local political party he represents.

…Despite a common perception that the Dobbs Ferry party is inherently more conservative than the Dobbs Ferry Democrats, Connett said that isn’t the case. …

Please Read More Here:

http://patch.com/new-york/rivertowns/what-is-the-dobbs-ferry-party

DAILY VOICE: Dobbs Ferry Residents Voice Rivertowns Square Concerns

Dobbs Ferry Mayor Hartley Connett and the Board of Trustees fielded public opinions on the pending Rivertowns Square project Thursday night in the Embassy Community Center.

Though some residents offered a positive outlook on the project’s likely impact, the majority of those in attendance voiced concern for what some felt was a large development in a small space.

“The biggest problem is the traffic it would warrant,” said Dobbs Ferry resident Hubert Herring. “Whatever else you want to say about the project is irrelevant, because the traffic would be a disaster.”

Apprehension about more traffic in Dobbs Ferry was the most frequent complaint. The project, located between the Saw Mill River Parkway and Lawrence Street, would include an apartment building with 202 units, a gourmet supermarket, retail and restaurant businesses, and a Sundance Cinemas complex with eight theaters…..

Please Read More Here:

http://rivertowns.dailyvoice.com/news/dobbs-ferry-residents-voice-rivertowns-square-concerns/549633/

7. Notes

This Ratings Page Has Been Updated With Additional Information

About Dobbs Ferry,, New York

Image = Dobbs_Ferry_highlighted.svg

Dobbs Ferry is a village in Westchester County, New York. The population was 10,875 at the 2010 census. The Village of Dobbs Ferry is located in, and is a part of, the town of Greenburgh. The village ZIP code is 10522.

Most of the Village falls into the boundaries of the Dobbs Ferry Union Free School District.

Dobbs Ferry was ranked seventh in the list of the top 10 places to live in New York State for 2014 according to the national online real estate brokerage Movoto. Dobbs Ferry is also the first village in New York State certified as a Climate Smart Community, honored in 2014 with the highest level given out in the state.

Dobbs Ferry was named after Jeremiah Dobbs, a descendent of William Dobbs, of Swedish and Dutch ancestry whose family ran a ferry service that traversed the Hudson River at this location. Jeremiah [Dobbs] was a fisherman and settled near the southern part of what is now Dobbs Ferry, and he “‘added to his meager income by ferriage of occasional travelers across the Hudson. He used a style of boat know at that day as a periauger, a canoe hollowed out of a solid log. . . From this primitive ferry the village took its name.'”

Dobbs Ferry played a vital role in the American Revolutionary War. The position of the village opposite the northernmost end of The Palisades gave it importance during the war. The region was repeatedly raided by camp followers of each army; earthworks and a fort, commanding the Hudson ferry and the ferry to Paramus, New Jersey, were built; the British army made Dobbs Ferry a rendezvous, after the Battle of White Plains in November 1776, and the continental division under General Benjamin Lincoln was here at the end of January 1777…..

Please Read More Here:

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

Population: 11,059 (2013)

University: Mercy College

Village of Hastings-on-Hudson – Susan Maggiotto – Under Review

 

Image = No Documents 711
To Date We Have Received No Documents From Village of Hastings-on-Hudson Clerk Susan Maggiotto. Update: Ms. Maggiotto provided us with a document showing her annual salary at $104,470.08, but the document supposedly listing her annual benefit and pension costs to taxpayers is unreadable. We are still waiting on the other public documents we requested.

1. Freedom Of Information Compliance And Knowledge Ratings:

Image = Major Delays 711

Under Review: Village of Hastings-on-Hudson Clerk Susan Maggiotto says she can’t respond to a June Freedom of Information requst for public documents until sometime in August. Most other of Westchester’s city, town and village clerks were able to fill these requests in les than a week.

2. Email Address For Filing FOI Requests 

smaggiotto@hastingsgov.org

3, Mailing Address For Filing FOI Requests

Town Clerk
7 Maple Avenue
Hastings-on-Hudson, NY 10706

4. Experience:

Internet reports indicate;

Previous Address:

24 Horner Ave, Hastings on Hudson, NY 10706

Susan Maggiotto Phone # 478-1909

Cell# 329-0377

Age:
Susan A Maggiotto is in her 70’s
Susan Has Lived In:
Hastings On Hudson, NY
Miami, FL

New York, NY

Susan’s Relatives

Mark Maggiotto

This Information has a quality score 51 out of 100

Please note, this contact’s quality score is below our quality threshold. This data could be outdated and is not guaranteed to be accurate.

5. From The Village Website:

Image = Hatings On Hudson Banner 74

The Village Clerk is appointed by the Mayor, subject to the approval of the Board of Trustees, to a two-year term which coincides with the term of office of the Mayor. The Clerk has custody of all village records, papers, books and communications, as well as the reports and communications of the Board of Trustees. At meetings of the Board of Trustees, the Village Clerk also serves as Clerk of the Board and keeps a record of the meetings.

The Village Clerk issues permits for parking at the railroad station.

The tentative assessment roll is filed with the Village Clerk by February 1 and is open for inspection during regular business hours. It is available online. Taxpayers may appeal an assessment to the Board of Assessment Review on “Grievance Day”, the third Tuesday in February. Taxpayers may appeal the Board’s decision in Small Claims Court.

Staff Contacts

Name Title Phone
Susan Maggiotto Deputy Manager/Village Clerk (914) 478-3400, ext. 611
Linda Loeb Deputy Village Clerk/Secretary to Village Manager (914) 478-3400, ext. 616
Ann Scholl Village Hall Assistant (914) 478-3400, ext. 629

6. Media Reports / Related Pages:

image = news = Village of Hastings-on-Hudson - Susan Maggiotto 11

FIND THE DATA: Susan Maggiotto Salaries

2011 $95,597

2013 $96,927

Please Read More Here:

http://state-employees.findthedata.com/d/a/Susan-Maggiotto

The Retrofit: Hastings-on-Hudson – Citizen Involvement

….There are a few improvements the village could undertake on its website to promote civic involvement. The “About the Village” section has six sub-sections: history; businesses; leisure activity; demographics; schools and attractions. As of October 25, only the first two subsections had working links. Given that both the Chamber of Commerce and the Historical Society have dedicated websites, it’s a little mystifying that those sites aren’t connected to the businesses and history categories, respectfully. Those sites have their own issues, too: the Chamber’s website (hohchamber.com) still advertises an event scheduled for March 31, 2011 and has a bafflingly mapping function, and the “History of Hastings-On-Hudson” section of the historical society’s website is currently under construction. It’s not clear where one would currently go to learn about the town’s attractions or leisure activities. For both residents and potential visitors, this is a major shortcoming to be addressed.

Please Read More Here:

https://sites.google.com/site/theretrofithastingsonhudson/governance/civic-engagement

YONKERS TRIBUNE: Hastings-on-Hudson Appoints Downtown Advocate

The Village of Hastings-on-Hudson is pleased to announce its appointment of Barbara Prisament to the position of Hastings Downtown Advocate.  She will start Monday, October 20th.  Ms. Prisament will report directly to Hastings Village Manager Fran Frobel and work with the Hastings Board of Trustees to review strategies, policies, and programs that affect the downtown community.  The goal of this newly created, part-time, position is to create a more vibrant, beautiful and economically successful downtown. Towards that end, Ms. Prisament will collaborate with Hastings government departments, boards, commissions, and committees as well as residents, business and property owners to ensure that the downtown serves the needs of residents and visitors as both a commercial marketplace and a community gathering place.

Ms. Prisament was selected by a committee comprised of Village Manager Fran Frobel, Deputy Manager/Village Clerk Susan Maggiotto,  Mayor Peter Swiderski and the Hastings Board of Trustees after an extensive process that included reviewing thirty-nine applications and interviewing 5 candidates…..

Please read more Here:

http://www.yonkerstribune.com/2014/10/hastings-on-hudson-appoints-downtown-advocate-by-hon-fran-frobel

Democratic Incumbents Win Hastings-on-Hudson Election

Mayor Peter Swiderski and Trustees Bruce Jennings and Meg Walker are the winning candidates in the Hastings-on-Hudson Village election. The incumbents were running uncontested, since no independent or additional party candidates filed to run in the election.

Out of 132 total voters—Swiderski received 98 votes; Jennings got 92, while Walker received 89 votes.

“It was a very quiet election,” said Susan Maggiotto, deputy village manager and village clerk.

Magiotto believes it may have been the lowest voter turnout in recent memory, however she wasn’t able to confirm this for sure offhand Tuesday night. According to Maggiotto, two years ago there was an uncontested election with three candidates that received a total 184 voters…..

Please Read More Here:

http://patch.com/new-york/rivertowns/democratic-incumbents-win-hastings-on-hudson-election

NEW YORK TIMES: Making Films, Making Waves

….Hastings-on-Hudson commands one of the highest fees for filming: $1,500 a day and other requirements, including paying for off-duty police officers, posting a bond and signing contracts with merchants, who also receive a fee when filming takes place downtown. ”We require any production company to jump through a lot of hoops to be able to film here,” Neil Hess, the Village Manager, said.

When H.B.O. went to Hastings last month to film ”Earthly Possessions,” starring Susan Sarandon, which was also filmed in New Rochelle and Yonkers, they paid the village $20,000 altogether. Susan Maggiotto, Deputy Manager for Hastings, said the feature that makes Hastings attractive to movie producers — the quaint, old-time look of the village — also makes production difficult to manage.

”Our little downtown is very concentrated and bordered on one side by the river,” Ms. Maggiotto said. ”There are very few choices of egress. In New York City, if you’re blocked, fine, you go another way. In Hastings, there’s just one way to get where you’re going, and if you can’t go that way, you’re stuck.”

Ms. Maggiotto said that some merchants did not see the benefit of film production. ”They say that the crews come in with their own food trucks, so they’re not in the local delis,” she said. ”All they see is that their own customers can’t get to their stores.”

The manager of Hastings Video disagreed, saying she greatly enjoyed seeing her small town transformed for the filming of ”Earthly Possessions.” Stores were dressed up with new fronts, and a rain machine produced drizzle in front of her store.

”It was fun,” Dorothy Honovich-Kavanah, the video store manager, said. ”Our store became Get Away Travel. The architect firm next door became a bank. The bank was made into a funeral home. And Susan Sarandon was lovely and gracious. It was really a nice thing to happen here.”

A Hastings resident, Linda Atkinson, was trying to run errands on the day ”Earthly Possessions” was being filmed. ”You’re trying to go about your daily business and some young kid comes up and says, ‘Excuse me, you’re not allowed on this side of the street,’ ” she said. ”And you want to say, ‘Excuse me, but I live here and I need to go to the video store and the bank.’ ”

Ms. Atkinson, an actress and a documentary film producer, said she knew the industry all too well. One recent morning she found a young woman in her front yard. The woman said she represented a film producer who was interested in using the house next door for a location.

”Being in the industry, I know my neighbor is excited because she’s going to make a couple of thousand bucks, but I know we’re talking about 20 trucks maybe, miles of cables, and you’re talking about people that don’t mind walking in your yard or stepping on your lilac bush,” Ms. Atkinson said.

Ms. Stevens, of the county film office, said that film crews are now taking a much more respectful attitude toward private property. ”I’ve monitored most of the productions that have gone on here,” she said. ”Part of my job is to protect Westchester County. I have seen a real change. There’s a softer, gentler production community, which is much more mannerly.”….

Please Read More Here:

http://www.nytimes.com/1999/01/10/nyregion/making-films-making-waves.html?pagewanted=all

DAILY VOICE: Hastings to Hold Lottery for Parking Permits

…Residents who wish to apply must include theirapplication , a copy of their registration and a check for $440 to the Village of Hastings-on-Hudson. You can also apply for a quarterly permit for $139. All applicants must be Hastings residents to be eligible.

The lottery isn’t done every year, only when it is deemed necessary by the village.

“We don’t know until 5 o’clock on Dec. 1 how many we have,” said village clerk Susan Maggiotto about how many applications they’ve received. “If we can give them to everybody we will, if not, then well do the lottery.”

The village has 164 permits to give out, which is more than the total number of parking spots in the lot.

“We give out maybe 20 percent more because if we only gave as many as we have places, the lot would be empty the majority of the day,” Maggiotto said. “We try to give out as many as we can without having anyone shut out.”….

http://rivertowns.dailyvoice.com/news/hastings-to-hold-lottery-for-parking-permits/456096/

Hastings Board of Trustees Names New Village Manager

The former town manager of Coventry, R.I., a suburb of Providence and that state’s largest town, has been picked by Hastings’ board of trustees to be the village’s new manager, effective Monday, July 18.

Francis A. Frobel, 53, replaces Neil P. Hess, who has been on a leave of absence, battling cancer, and who retires July 31. Frobel, who has been described as “typically stone-faced” by the Providence Journal, served as Town Manager of Coventry, which has an area of 64.8 square miles and a population of over 33,000, for 19 years through late April.

Before that, he was assistant town manager of Killingly, Ct., in eastern Connecticut, for eight years.

He received a B.A. degree in political science and public administration from Central Connecticut State University and a Master’s degree in public administration from the University of Hartford.

Frobel’s appointment does not also include the position of village treasurer, an additional post that Hess held. The new village manager will make recommendations to the board of trustees about filling that spot, Mayor Wm. Lee Kinnally Jr. told Hastings News.

“He will be looking at the way we are structured in general; I would expect that from our new manager,” Kinnally said.

Frobel will be paid $140,000 plus benefits that include retirement, health, three weeks vacation, a moving allowance and a housing allowance, Kinnally also said.

As Coventry town manager, he received $104,275, according to another Providence Journal report. Frobel was the board’s top choice, Kinnally noted in response to a question.

The mayor said that Frobel will replace Susan Maggiotto as Acting Village Manager for the rest of the month, until Hess’s retirement becomes effective.

Maggiotto will continue as Acting Treasurer, he said. The board of trustees expects to approve Frobel’s employment contract at a special meeting called for Monday at 8 p.m.

http://www.bogart.cc/sitebuildercontent/sitebuilderfiles/hastings_news–extracts.pdf

7. Notes

This Ratings Page Has Been Updated With Additional Information

About Hastings-on-Hudson, New York

Hastings-on-Hudson is a village in Westchester County, New York, United States. It is located in the southwest part of the town of Greenburgh. As of the 2010 census, it had a population of 7,849. It lies on U.S. Route 9, “Broadway” in Hastings.

The area that is now Hastings-on-Hudson was once the home of the Weckquaesgeek Native Americans, one of theAlgonquian tribes. In summer, the Weckquaesgeeks camped at the mouth of the ravine running under the present Warburton Avenue Bridge. There they fished, swam and collected oyster and clamshells used to make wampum. On the level plain nearby (which is now Maple Avenue), they planted corn and possibly tobacco.

Around 1650 a Dutch carpenter named Frederick Philipse arrived in New Amsterdam. In 1682 Philipse traded with the Native Americans for the area that is now Dobbs Ferry and Hastings. In 1693 the English crown granted Philipse the Manor of Philipsburg, which included what is now Hastings-on-Hudson. After dividing the area into four nearly equal-sized farms, the Philipses leased them to Dutch, English and French Huguenot settlers.

During the American Revolution, what is now Hastings lay between the lines of the warring forces and was declared neutral territory. In reality, the area became a no-man’s land and was raided repeatedly by both sides. Following the Revolution, the Philipses, who had been loyal to George III, saw their vast lands confiscated and sold by the newly established American state. In 1785 the four farms comprising today’s Hastings were bought by James DeClark, Jacobus Dyckman, George Fisher, and tavern keeper Peter Post.

Around the same time, Westchester County, which had been established as one of the 10 original counties in New York, was divided into towns, and the area that is now Hastings became part of the town of Greenburgh. The village was incorporated in 1879 and its name changed from Hastings-Upon-Hudson to Hastings-on-Hudson.

Stone quarrying was the earliest industry in Hastings. From 1865 to 1871, hundreds of Scottish and Irish laborers blasted huge quantities ofdolomite marble from a white Westchester marble quarry. An inclined railroad carried the marble down to the quarry wharf where it was dressed by skilled stonecutters and loaded onto ships bound for cities like New York and Charleston, South Carolina.

By the 1880s, Hastings Pavement was producing hexagonal paving blocks which were used extensively in Central Park and Prospect Park in Brooklyn. Between 1895 and 1900, Hastings Pavement produced 10 million such blocks and shipped them throughout the United States and to cities in Canada, Brazil and England. By 1891 the National Conduit and Cable Company had established an operation on the waterfront producing cables for utility companies here and abroad. Labor strife between striking workers of the National Cable and Conduit Company in 1912 left four people dead. Two were striking workers; the remaining two were bystanders. Similar labor unrest occurred in 1916, whereby the village was put under house arrest.

During World War I, 200 National Guardsmen were stationed in Hastings because of the security interests of the National Conduit plant and a chemical plant opened byFrederick G. Zinsser that produced a wood alcohol called Hastings Spirits…..

Please Read More Here:

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hastings-on-Hudson,_New_York

Area: 2.896 mi²

Zip code: 10706

Population: 7,947 (2013)

Area code: 914

Village of Larchmont – Justin Datino – Under Review

Image = Mayor Anne McAndrews, Village of Larchmont Administrator Justin Datino 74

Justin Datino And Mayor Anne McAndrews

1. Freedom Of Information Compliance And Knowledge Ratings:

Image = I think I Can 711

Under Review: The new Village of Larchmont Clerk Justin Datino screwed up the responses to our freedom of Information requests, so we are going to give him a second chance.

Here is The Email Where We Asked Him To Try Again….

Date: Mon, Jul 11, 2016 at 8:53 PM
Subject: Re: VOL Harrod FOIL #2 response letter 7-7-16
To: villageclerk@villageoflarchmont.org
Cc: administrator@villageoflarchmont.org, Steven Wrabel <SWrabel@mgslawyers.com>, ssomshekar@lohud.com, jfusco@lohud.com, dwilson3@lohud.com, mspillane@lohud.com, Fscandale@lohud.com, jfitzgib@lohud.com

Dear Justin Datino,

For the village of Larchmont’s new  $126,000 Administrator / Clerk Wiz Kid you sure are sloppy in replying to Freedom of Information requests for public documents.

Two of my FOILS you have not acknolwged and two other Foils dating as far back as June haven responded to with a boiler plate .pdf saying…..

You may expect a response detailing the extent to which your request will be granted or denied or notified if additional time is needed on or about {DATE}.

Justin where it says “{DATE}” you are supposed to mannually insert a date on this boiler plate response.

Could you please send me these boiler plate FOI forms again with the date included or better yet simply provide us with the public documents that most Westchester’s other town and village clerks have already supplied to the public interest FOIL Westchester project.

Normally we would be perturbed if a very highly compensated clerk responded in this manner, but I know that you are a little wet behind the ears so we will provide you with a little extra time to time to try again.

Also please respond to the other two FOIL requests that are just gathering dust on your desk, especially the one that seeks public documents on how much the single family homeowners of Larchmont are paying for your benefit and pension costs.l

hoping you get it right this time,

Brian Harrod

NY FOI – Website
https://nyfoi.org/

2. Email Address For Filing FOI Requests

villageclerk@villageoflarchmont.org

3, Mailing Address For Filing FOI Requests

Town Clerk
120 Larchmont Avenue
Larchmont, New York 10538

4. Experience:

From The Internet we learned that Justin Datino previously was Scarsdale’s deputy superintendent of public works.

Mr. Datino, who holds a master’s degree in public administration from SUNY Albany.

The village of Larchmont originally pursued the idea of hiring a village administrator in November 2014, when it hired Donald Marra, a former Dobbs Ferry mayor turned municipal consultant, for $15,000.

In the past, Mr. Marra helped the villages of Bronxville and Tuckahoe find village administrators, the latter of which recently created the administrator position for the first time as well.

Mr.Datino was initially paid a yearly salary of $126,500.

Mr. Datino currently resides in Elmsford

5. From The Village Website:

Image = Village Larchmont Website Banner With Seal 74

Welcome to the Village Clerk’s website pages!  We serve the residents and businesses of the Village of Larchmont as well as the Village Board and various other volunteer Committees and Boards.

This office is the general information office for the Village.  We maintain the official records of meetings.  The Village Clerk is the Records Management Officer and Records Access Officer for public FOIL (Freedom of Information Law) requests.

Our office also handles the issuance of parking permits, handicapped parking permits and various otherlicenses/permits for the Village.

The Village Clerk’s Office is your link to the operations of Village government.  Please feel free to contact us with any questions you may have.

6. Media Reports / Related Pages

Image = News = Village of Larchmont - Justin Datino 74

Ideas for Re-Energizing Larchmont’s Downtown

Many building owners are listed as LLCs & the address is in care of a managing agent in NYC

Mamaroneck Avenue is bustling, in strong contrast to downtown Larchmont. Storefronts remain boarded up for months, even years.

The Larchmont-Mamaroneck Local Summit heard from four panelists last week who are concerned about this:  the Village of Larchmont Mayor Anne McAndrews, Village of Larchmont Administrator Justin Datino; Carolyn Fugere, Manager of the Larchmont office of Julia B Fee, Sotheby’s and Head of the Larchmont Chamber of Commerce; and Tiffany Smith, Co-founder of the Facebook group Love Larchmont 10538.….

Please Read More Here:

http://theloopny.com/ideas-for-re-energizing-larchmonts-downtown/ 

JOURNAL NEWS: Larchmont upholds teardown moratorium

…Before the board of trustees made its decision, KOSL challenged the legality of Larchmont’s moratorium in New York State Supreme Court. That ruling is still pending. McAndrews said the village has not yet been served with a court appeal.

“But that doesn’t mean it’s not coming,” she said.

Chiocchio and the developer did not return calls seeking comment.

What’s happening at 40 Ocean Ave. has become a village-wide trend that officials said needs to slow down. The village board approved a six-month moratorium in January that temporarily banned all pending and future applications for demolitions on and subdivisions of residential properties. During that time, village planning consultant Richard Preiss will review Larchmont’s zoning code.

Village Manager Justin Datino said there are two other pending projects, at 5 Thompson Place and 78 Shore Drive, that are impacted by the moratorium….

Please Read More Here:

http://www.lohud.com/story/news/local/westchester/mamaroneck/2016/03/08/larchmont-upholds-moratorium/81485260/

LARCHMONT LEDGER: Rotary Club Features Anne McAndrews

Rotary Club Features Anne McAndrews

The Larchmont Rotary Club recently hosted Anne McAndrews, former Mayor of Larchmont, at their April 15th weekly luncheon at the Larchmont Yacht Club. McAndrews spoke of 3 initiatives that she was most proud of….

….The appointment of a Village Administrator was McAndrews third point.  Justin Datino, presently overseeing the computerization of several  Village functions, supervises the day to day operations of the village and also prepares the capital plans to assure the future needs of the Village are identified and adequately funded.

During the Q and A period which followed, the former Mayor smiled several times and pointed out that the question would require another full program to address properly…..

Please Read More Here:

http://larchmontledger.com/town1.html

WCBS – TV: Façade Collapses At Popular Larchmont Restaurant Tequila Sunrise

…As CBS2’s Matt Kozar reported, firefighters said the building had a fire several years ago and it damaged the roof. But they were also looking at whether the terra cotta roof was too heavy.

“In terms of ongoing random inspections, the buildings are inspected by the fire department for fire safety inspections annually, and I don’t have the record right now when that was last performed for the building,” said Larchmont Village Administrator Justin Datino.

Datino said more thorough building inspections do not happen unless work is being done that requires a permit.

Please Read More Here:

http://newyork.cbslocal.com/2015/08/28/larchmont-facade-collapse/

7. Notes:

This Ratings Page Has Been Updated With Additional Information

About Larchmont, New York

Image = Larchmont_highlighted.svg

Larchmont is a village located within the Town of Mamaroneck in Westchester County, New York, approximately 18 miles northeast of Midtown Manhattan. The population of the village was 5,864 at the 2010 census.

In July 2005, CNN/Money and Money magazine ranked Larchmont 11th on its list of the 100 Best Places to Live in the United States.

Originally inhabited by the Siwanoy (an Algonquian tribe), Larchmont was discovered by the Dutch in 1614. In 1661, John Richbell, a merchant from Hampshire, England, traded a minimal amount of goods and trinkets with the Siwanoy in exchange for land that is today known as the Town of Mamaroneck. The purchase included three peninsulas of land that lay between the Mamaroneck River to the east, and Pelham Manor to the west. The east neck is now known as Orienta while the middle neck is what is now known as Larchmont Manor. The third neck was later sold and is now known as Davenport Neck in New Rochelle. The purchase was contested by Thomas Revell who, one month following Richbell’s purchase, bought the land from the Siwanoy at a higher price. Richbell petitioned Governor Stuyvesant, Director General of the Colonies of the New Netherland, and Richbell was issued the land patent in 1662. In 1664 Great Britain took control of the colonies and Richbell received an English title for his lands in 1668 whereupon he began to encourage settlement. In 1675 Richbell leased his “Middle Neck” to his brother however when he died in 1684 none of his original property remained in his name. In 1700, Samuel Palmer, who had been elected the Town’s first supervisor in 1697, obtained the original leases on the “Middle Neck”, and in 1722 the Palmer family obtained full title to the land which included what is now the Incorporated Village of Larchmont.

Larchmont’s oldest and most historic home, the “Manor House” on Elm Avenue, was built in 1797 by Peter Jay Munro. Munro was the nephew of John Jay, the first Chief Justice of the United States Supreme Court, and was later adopted by Jay. At the beginning of the 19th Century, Munro was active in the abolitionist movement, helping to found the New York State Manumission Society, along with his uncle and Alexander Hamilton. In 1795 Munro had purchased much of the land owned by Samuel Palmer and by 1828 he owned all of the “Middle Neck” south of the Post Road and much of the land north of the Post Road as well. Munro later became a lawyer with Aaron Burr‘s law firm and built a home in Larchmont Manor known as the Manor House. Munro’s house faced towards the Boston Post Road (the back is now used as the front), which tended to generate a lot of dust in summer months. To combat this, his gardener imported a Scottish species of larch trees that were known to be fast growing. These were planted along the front of the property, eventually giving the village its name.

When Munro died in 1833, his son Henry inherited the property however he soon lost the property and it was sold at auction in 1845 to Edward knight Collins, owner of a steamship line. By the end of the Civil War in 1865, Collins had gone bankrupt and his estate was put up for auction and purchased by Thompson J.S. Flint. Flint divided the estate into building lots and called his development company the Larchmont Manor Company. Flint converted the Munro Mansion into an inn for prospective buyers and reserved some waterfront land for use as a park for the future residents of the Manor. After 1872 the area became a popular summer resort for wealthy New Yorkers. The arrival of the New York & New Haven Railroad replaced the stagecoach and steamboat as the main mode of transportation to and from New York City, making it much easier to commute and thus, modernizing travel which ultimately helped develop much of Westchester from farmland into suburbs by the 1900.

The New York legislature created Mamaroneck as a town in 1788, which includes a part of the Village of Mamaroneck, The Village of Larchmont, and the unincorporated area in the Town of Mamaroneck. This three part division occurred in the 1890s to meet the growing demand for municipal services which the town could not provide. At the time, a town was defined as only being able to provide basic government functions leaving residents of Larchmont in need of adequate water supply, sewage disposal, garbage collection, and police and fire protection. In 1891 the residents of Larchmont Manor obtained a charter from the legislature in which they incorporated that section of Town into a village. In order to comply with a law requiring incorporated villages to have at least 300 inhabitants per square mile, the boundaries of the newly incorporated Larchmont village were expanded beyond the Manor’s 288 acres (1.17 km2) to include land to its north and south of the railroad, and east to Weaver Street.

After the advent of the automobile, Larchmont quickly transitioned from a resort community into one of the earliest suburbs in the United States, catering to wealthy individuals commuting to and from New York City for work on a daily basis. Many of the Victorian “cottages” and a grand hotels (such as the Bevan House and Manor Inn) remain to this day, though these have been converted to other uses such as private residences. The Larchmont Yacht Club hosts an annual Race Week competition (2007 marked the 110th running of this event). It is adjacent to Manor Park, which was designed by Jeremiah Towle, an early summer resident of Larchmont Manor and an engineer. The Larchmont Shore Club (near the Larchmont Yacht Club) hosts an annual Swim Across America challenge, across Long Island Sound.

Larchmont and neighboring Mamaroneck and New Rochelle are noted for their significant French American populace…..

Please Read More Here:

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

Zip code: 10538

 

Population: 5,951 (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

Image = Mount_Kisco_highlighted.svg

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

Image = Christopher Bradbury 75

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)