Fifty people from 25 countries became U.S. citizens this week during a naturalization ceremony at Port Washington High School, according to Newsday. The new Americans hailed from everywhere from Ireland to India, representing the kind of diversity that makes Long Island what it is.
What's striking isn't just the numbers — it's that they chose to hold the ceremony at a high school. There's something perfect about taking the oath of citizenship in the same kind of building where kids learn about democracy in civics class. These 50 people didn't just memorize the Constitution; they lived through the years-long process of earning the right to call this place home.
Nassau County has been a gateway for immigrants for generations, from Italian families in the 1950s to today's ceremony representing two dozen countries. The American Dream might feel abstract in campaign speeches, but in a Port Washington gym on a Tuesday morning, it's 50 people raising their right hands and meaning it.
A Presidential Emergency Board sided with Long Island Rail Road unions in contract negotiations with the Metropolitan Transportation Authority, according to Newsday. The decision starts a 60-day cooling-off period, after which unions could legally strike as early as May 16 if no agreement is reached.
This is how these negotiations always go: union threatens strike, MTA initially lowballs, commuters start stress-planning alternate routes, then suddenly there's more money on the table. The LIRR carries about 336,000 riders on a typical weekday — imagine that many extra cars on the LIE and Belt Parkway if trains stop running.
The timing couldn't be worse for a strike, with spring break travel picking up and summer beach season around the corner. Both sides know a work stoppage would be a political nightmare, which is probably why the MTA is opening its wallet wider now rather than later. Smart money says they'll reach a deal before anyone has to dust off those old bus schedules.
The Town of Brookhaven just struck a tentative deal with Verizon to bring FiOS cable service to residents, according to Greater Long Island. This breaks Optimum's decades-long monopoly on cable TV in the town — something that's had residents stuck with whatever service quality and pricing Optimum decided to offer, with nowhere else to turn.
The franchise agreement still needs town board approval, but if it goes through, Brookhaven residents will finally get what most of Long Island has been enjoying for years: actual choice in cable providers. Anyone who's dealt with Optimum's customer service or watched their bill creep up year after year knows exactly why this matters.
Brookhaven has been one of the last major holdouts on Long Island without FiOS coverage. While neighboring towns like Islip and Smithtown have had competitive cable markets for nearly two decades, Brookhaven residents have been stuck in what amounts to a cable desert. The timing couldn't be better — with more people working from home and streaming everything, reliable internet isn't a luxury anymore.
Nassau County passed a kratom ban and introduced nitrous oxide restrictions targeting two substances you can buy at corner stores: nitrous oxide canisters (aka "whip-its") and kratom, a plant-based supplement. The restrictions come as officials say both have become popular ways for teens to get high, according to the New York Post.
The proposed nitrous oxide legislation would require buyers to hold a valid Food Sale Permit — those little metal canisters are supposed to be for making whipped cream, but inhaling the gas gives a brief, dangerous buzz. The kratom ban is more straightforward: no more sales, period. The herbal supplement, legal in most states, can produce opioid-like effects and has landed some users in emergency rooms.
Both substances have been flying under the radar because they're not traditional "drugs" — they're sold alongside energy drinks and baking supplies. Nassau's moves put it ahead of most counties nationwide, where these products remain largely unregulated. For parents wondering what else is hiding in plain sight at the local deli, this might be worth a conversation.
Rex Heuermann, the Massapequa Park architect charged in the Gilgo Beach serial killings, is expected to enter a guilty plea, according to sources familiar with the case. The development would bring closure to one of Long Island's most notorious murder cases — a mystery that haunted the South Shore for more than a decade.
Heuermann was arrested in July 2023 and charged with killing seven women whose remains were found along Ocean Parkway. The case broke open after years of investigative work, including DNA evidence that linked him to the crimes. For residents who spent years wondering if a killer was still loose in their backyard, a guilty plea would finally provide answers.
The Gilgo Beach case became synonymous with Long Island's darker history — a reminder that even in suburbia, evil can hide in plain sight. Heuermann lived just miles from where the victims were found, a fact that still unsettles neighbors who might have passed him at the grocery store or gas station without knowing.
The Golden State Warriors superstar is taking his UNDERRATED Golf tour to Bethpage State Park this summer, creating opportunities for Long Island kids who wouldn't otherwise get near a golf course. The program focuses on introducing golf to young athletes from underserved communities — which, given that a round at most Long Island courses costs more than some people's weekly grocery budget, is definitely needed here.
Bethpage Black is famous for hosting major championships and being one of the few truly public golf courses that doesn't require a second mortgage to play. It's the perfect spot for Curry's mission: proving that golf doesn't have to be a country club sport. The tour combines golf instruction with mentorship, giving kids both technical skills and access to a sport that's traditionally been behind economic barriers.
This isn't just a celebrity photo-op — it's addressing something real. Long Island has some of the best golf courses in the world, but most are priced out of reach for working families. When a three-time NBA champion shows up to change that equation, even for a day, it's worth paying attention to.