The HPPD has just demonstrated how municipalities can plan to work together for the benefit of everyone, and we hope that the Town will follow their lead.
The HPPD has just demonstrated how municipalities can plan to work together for the benefit of everyone, and we hope that the Town will follow their lead.
In order to achieve its desired result, the Town will refuse to acknowledge the obvious: that the route to Shelbourne on Underhill Road is, in fact, circuitous. Also, the Appellate Division ruled on timeline today.
Last week, Greenburgh Town Supervisor Paul Feiner appealed to Albany for permission to use absentee ballots in Edgemont's incorporation referendum while he simultaneously appealed the court order to hold the election. Something isn't right.
Review the legal memo, a summary of the memo, a helpful Q&A, and a letter from several Edgemont lawyers endorsing the law firm's conclusions.
Paul Feiner will appeal a court’s ruling in favor of Edgemont’s petition to vote on incorporation. As confirmed by Tom Abinanti, it’s all part of Feiner's larger effort to delay the vote, no matter whom he hurts in the process.
The Town Supervisor continues his campaign against Edgemont with unsubstantiated statements about incorporation. The EIC has both internal research and Town data to demonstrate that Mr. Feiner's statements are baseless.
Yesterday, Justice Susan Cacace “reversed, vacated, and annulled” Feiner’s rejection of Edgemont’s incorporation petition.
Town Supervisor Paul Feiner declared that “those pushing for [Edgemont’s] incorporation don’t want to continue supporting programs that help the poor.”
We think that the kind of race-baiting Mr. Feiner is using against Edgemont is deplorable, and frankly, the complete opposite of what’s actually happening. To wit, Edgemont has been advocating for the department, which includes the Theodore D. Young Community Center, while the village mayors are categorically rejecting paying for this social service, no matter how little it would cost, and threatened to litigate.
The proposed Shelbourne assisted living development project at the Sprain Brook Nursery site represents a symptom of larger Town governance problems.
Greenburgh came in under the tax cap and still has an AAA rating. Should we care?
At the 2018 Town budget hearing, the Town Board made several troubling statements about its inconsistent funding of social service programs.
The Town Board does it again.
Three out of five (60%) Edgemont voters made the conscious decision to NOT vote for Mr. Feiner when they had no other alternative.
NYTimes reports on Edgemont’s Incorporation movement, the issue with Greenburgh’s electoral calculus, zoning and planning issues, the economics and opportunity to share or buy back services, and of course the outrageous attempts by Feiner and Abinanti to thwart our constitutional rights to vote on the issue.
Greenburgh's town taxes are going up but a Village of Edgemont will have $1MM of additional budget should we incorporate.
Yesterday, the Court agreed with the EIC that we are a necessary party to the lawsuit between incorporation opponent Don Siegel, on one side, and Town Supervisor Paul Feiner, on the other.
Susan Cacace, Acting Justice of the Supreme Court of the State of New York, Westchester County, denied Mr. Feiner's motion to dismiss the EIC's Article 78 lawsuit.
This week, Town Supervisor Paul Feiner took several noteworthy steps forward on incorporation, and telegraphed what the next few months might hold.
For those without subscriptions to the Scarsdale Inquirer, there were several articles on Edgemont and Greenburgh in today’s edition.