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Friday, April 26, 2024
Vol. 73, No. 17
N E W H Y D E PA R K
KIDS GUIDE
PILIPS, STRAUSS QUESTIONED RUNNING 7 MARATHONS IN 7 DAYS ON BLAKEMAN
PAGES 21-28
PAGE 2
PAGE 47
State aid to schools rises in budget deal
E C L I P S E G L A S S E S D O N AT I O N
N. Shore Districts sees gains with $1.3B increase, continuation of Hold Harmless Nassau County schools will receive a year-to-year 5.69% boost in state aid, with a majority of North Shore districts seeing increases from the prior year and from Gov. Kathy Hochul’s initial proposal. The New York State Legislature adopted the 2024-2025 $237 billion state budget nearly three weeks late Saturday, which encompassed an additional $1.3 billion in school state aid and the continuation of the foundation aid Hold Harmless policy. Overall, more than $35.3 billion is being allocated to schools throughout the state, increasing by 3.82% from the prior year. Also adopted in the budget is a 421-p tax incentive to construct housing outside New York City, including $650 million in discretionary funds for pro-housing communities, $500 million for the construction of up to 15,000 new homes on state land and incentives for accessory dwelling units. The school aid increase comes after months of pushback from local school districts opposing the governor’s proposal to repeal Hold Harmless, a procedure that ensures school districts receive the same amount or more in foundation aid from year to year. But with all school districts adopt-
ing budgets before the state budget passage, it is uncertain how these late school aid numbers will impact their budgets. The Manhasset School District was at the forefront in advocating for the continuation of the Hold Harmless policy, with nearly every budget meeting including a push for residents to advocate for the re-implementation and to reach out to their representatives. The district was facing a $629,000, or 20.7%, drop in its foundation aid. Yet it crafted its budget on the assumption that these funds would be restored. If it was not restored, then its fallback was fulfilling those $629,000 in missing funds with FEMA recovery funds. The Manhasset School District will now be receiving the largest proportional increase in state aid with a 25.4% boost. In total, it will be getting $6,318,661 in state aid, a $1,279,686 increase from the prior year. The state aid numbers are based on state legislation as reported by Newsday. The state aid numbers represent the total state aid, with breakdowns for foundation aid not available. Included in the state aid proposals is the allocation of nearly $1 million for universal pre-K, which some schools are unable to utilize if they do not have such a program. Continued on Page 44
PHOTO COURTESY OF HERRICKS SCHOOL DISTRICT CREDIT
Denton Avenue students collect eclipse glasses to send to South American students who will view an eclipse Oct. 2.
Seven vie for two seats on Herricks ed board BY TAY L O R H E R Z L I C H The Herricks School District will hold a contested trustee election May 21, with seven candidates vying for two seats.
BEST
10TH ANNUAL
2024
BY C A M E RY N O A K ES
OF
NASSAU
COUNTY WWW.THEISLAND360.COM/CONTEST2024
Incumbent Trustee Brian Hassan is running for re-election. Challenger Maria Bono is also running for his current seat. Newcomers Eric Lo, Surendra Gupta, Shaheda Amin Quraishi, Ra-
vote
vinder S. Ratra and Russell M. Stuart are all running for the seat left vacant by Trustee Nancy Feinstein, who is stepping down from the board after serving as a trustee for 12 years. Continued on Page 37
NOW THROUGH MAY 24
WHO WILL BE THE FAVORITES IN 2024? https://theisland360.com/bonscontest/