Serving Port Washington, Manorhaven, Flower Hill, Baxter Estates, Port Washington North and Sands Point
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Friday, August 14, 2020
Vol. 5, No. 33
Port WashingtonTimes LIVING 50+
PRIDE IN PORT CANCELED
STATE CERTIFIES SUOZZI RACE 6 WEEKS LATER
PAGES 21-28
PAGE 2
PAGE 7
A week later, many still have no electricity PSEG LI blasted for response failures BY R O S E W E L D ON
PHOTO VIA PORT WASHINGTON LIFE
A sailboat docked in Port Washington leans to one side after Tropical Storm Isaias.
“Before the major storm knocked out power for hundreds of thousands of Long Islanders, the electric company promised that they were prepared,” Nassau County Legislator Delia De-Riggi-Whitton (D-Glen Cove) wrote in a letter to her constituents Aug. 7. “Then, the website for reporting power outages crashed and the phone lines jammed, text messages and apps fared little better, trees tangled in electrical wires blocked major thoroughfares days later and the company couldn’t track what traffic lights were still out.” DeRiggi-Whit-
ton wrote. “Are we talking about Superstorm Sandy in 2012 – or Tropical Storm Isaias just a few days ago?” Over a week after winds from Tropical Storm Isaias rocked Long Island for under three hours, thousands of PSEG Long Island customers remained without power, and state officials were launching probes into the utility’s perceived ineffective response in terms of preparedness and communications, said by some to rival the Long Island Power Authority’s response to Superstorm Sandy. THOUSANDS WITHOUT ELECTRICITY PSEG initially said on Aug. 6 that Continued on Page 35
4 N. Shore districts breached deadline: gov BY R OB E RT PELAEZ AND ROSE WELDON The office of Gov. Andrew Cuomo claims that the Manhas-
set, New Hyde Park-Garden City Park, Mineola and Garden City school districts are among 107 in the state that have not submitted models for in-person learning that were due July 31.
But the Manhasset and Mineola districts said they had submitted their plans, and the other two districts have posted their plans online. Cuomo announced on Friday that school districts throughout the state will be permitted to open their doors for in-person education beginning in late August or early September.
In a statement issued with the list on Monday, Cuomo said the districts’ in-person plans will be due Friday, with districts that fail to meet the deadline unable to provide in-person learning this year. “There are 107 school districts that have not submitted their plan – for those 107 school districts, how they didn’t submit a plan is beyond me. If they don’t
submit a plan by this Friday, they can’t open,” Cuomo said in a statement. The governor said that the districts, like all districts in the state, are required to complete three to five public sessions with parents and teachers, and post their plans for remote learning, testing and tracing on their website by Aug. 21 to be in compliContinued on Page 34
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