It was drawn in pencil and crayon on an 8 x 11” paper. Her 10-year-old son Cooper told her it was a drawing of his school.  But Nicole Miller was puzzled when she saw that he had drawn bars over the front door.
New York has barred drivers from driving past buses picking up or dropping off kids for a long time, and a 2019 law let local governments install cameras and issue tickets to those who ignored the flashing stop signs that extend from the vehicle’s side.
A boater was hospitalized after two yachts caught fire and sank at a Long Island marina early Wednesday, officials said. Firefighters were first called to Manhasset Bay Marina in Port Washington around 12:30 a.m. to a 43-foot Marine Trader yacht that was completely engulfed in flames, cops said.
The median sale price on Long Island, excluding the East End, rose to $700,000 in the fourth quarter, which was 10.2% higher than in the same quarter a year ago, according to a new report from real estate brokerage Douglas Elliman and appraisal firm Miller Samuel.
The new version of the Water Resources Development Act includes new language that will lower the federal aid threshold for coastal renourishment on Long Island in the wake of damaging storms.
Window World of Long Island has been voted the best window company on Long Island in the 2024 Bethpage Best of Long Island contest!
Kristen Rosario, 22, of East Northport, has officially been crowned Miss Long Island, with 17-year-old Adrianna Lane of Smithtown named Miss Long Island Teen.
The court-mandated auction of Point Buckler's 50 acres of marshland on the southern edge of Grizzly Bear ended a fight for ownership between state water agencies and the island's former owner,
The Long Island Unitarian Universalist Fund (LIUUF) at the New York Community Trust announced this week that it awarded $378,000 in grants to 15 nonprofits in 2024. “For more than 30 years, the LIUUF has demonstrated bold leadership,
“Having a more inclusive workplace fosters innovation, and private employers should have flexibility to implement policies they think can support their operations and bottom line,” Matt Cohen, CEO and president of the Long Island Association, the region’s most influential business group, said in a statement to Newsday.