Remember when the state swooped in to "fix" Nassau University Medical Center earlier this year? Well, the person Governor Hochul handpicked to run the place just walked away from the job, as Google News - Nassau County reported.
The timing raises some eyebrows. NUMC has been struggling financially for years, burning through taxpayer money while patients complained about care quality. When Albany stepped in with promises of reform, it was supposed to signal a fresh start for the hospital that serves much of Nassau County.
For residents who rely on NUMC for emergency care or specialized services, this leadership shuffle means more uncertainty. The hospital isn't going anywhere, but whoever steps in next will be the third person trying to fix the same problems in less than a year. That's not exactly the stability you want from your local medical center.
Justin Timberlake is suing Sag Harbor, its police department, and police chief to block the release of body camera footage from his June DWI arrest, as r/longisland reported. The pop star's legal team argues that releasing the footage would "devastate" his privacy rights.
The lawsuit aims to prevent the village from complying with a Freedom of Information Law request for the arrest footage. Timberlake was pulled over in Sag Harbor last summer and charged with driving while intoxicated — a case that eventually resulted in a plea deal.
Here's the thing about FOIL requests: they exist specifically to keep government actions transparent and accountable. Police body camera footage from arrests is routinely released to the public. Timberlake's privacy concerns are understandable, but arguing that a millionaire celebrity deserves special protection from the same transparency rules that apply to everyone else is a tough sell.
Elias Manolis, a 17-year-old from Franklin Square, just got news that'll make your holiday complaints about traffic and relatives feel pretty small: he found a kidney donor match. The teen was born with a rare condition that left him needing dialysis and waiting for a transplant, as ABC7 reported.
The match comes after what his family describes as a community-wide effort to find a donor. Here's the thing about kidney donations that might surprise you: about 90,000 Americans are waiting for one right now, and the average wait time is 3-5 years. Living donors — people who can spare one of their two healthy kidneys — can cut that wait dramatically.
Elias is set for surgery soon, and if all goes well, he'll trade his dialysis schedule for the chance to just be a regular high school senior. Sometimes the news cycle delivers exactly the reminder we need about what actually matters.
Second graders at a Baldwin elementary school are running their own lemonade stands — and getting a crash course in supply chains, profit margins, and customer service that would make a business school proud. As Patch reported, the kids are learning hands-on economics through their "Lemon-Aide" project.
The timing couldn't be better. With inflation still pinching family budgets, these seven-year-olds are discovering firsthand how costs, pricing, and customer demand actually work — lessons that stick a lot better than any textbook. They're calculating expenses, setting prices, and figuring out what happens when you run out of cups on a busy day.
Meanwhile, most high schoolers still graduate without knowing how to balance a checkbook. These Baldwin second graders are already ahead of the game.
Governor Hochul is warning that gas prices could spike by $2.23 per gallon while simultaneously trying to delay green energy mandates, as Google News - Nassau County reported. You can't make this stuff up.
For Long Island drivers already paying some of the highest gas prices in the nation — we're talking over $3.50 per gallon regularly — this potential increase would push costs above $5.70 per fill-up. That's rent money for many families.
The irony? The same green energy programs Hochul wants to delay are designed to reduce our dependence on volatile gas prices in the first place. It's like complaining about getting wet while holding an umbrella you refuse to open. The controversy highlights the awkward dance politicians do when climate policy meets election-year economics.
Turns out there's a meteorology teacher in Massapequa who gets to put his weather expertise where his mouth is — he's one of the district officials who helps decide whether to cancel school during storms. As Google News - Levittown reported, this guy combines classroom knowledge with real decision-making power when storms roll through Long Island.
For parents constantly refreshing school websites at 5 AM during winter storms, it's probably reassuring to know someone with actual meteorological training is weighing in on those calls. Most districts rely on superintendent gut feelings and whatever Weather Channel is saying — having a weather expert in the room who understands local microclimates and can read radar properly seems like a no-brainer.
Though let's be honest: his students probably think twice before complaining about his weather unit now.