Hempstead News

April 6, 2026

In this edition

  1. Cohen Children’s Medical Center named first Autism Friendly hospital in US
  2. Gas prices on Long Island hit $4 average for first time since 2022, AAA says - Newsday
  3. Long Islanders struggle as utility bills surge 20%: ‘It’s all adding up’ - New York Post
  4. UAE-based delivery company set to move regional space from Queens to Bethpage
  5. Coast Guard rescues 4 boaters from 12-foot waves off Fire Island, report says
news

Cohen Children’s Medical Center named first Autism Friendly hospital in US

Northwell's Cohen Children's Medical Center in New Hyde Park made history this week as the first hospital in the U.S. to earn the "Autism Friendly" designation from Autism Speaks, according to LI Press. The certification recognizes the hospital's commitment to providing specialized services and building stronger connections with autistic patients and their families.

This matters because roughly 1 in 36 kids in the U.S. are diagnosed with autism — and hospital visits can be overwhelming sensory experiences even for neurotypical children. Cohen's designation means they've restructured everything from waiting rooms to treatment protocols to reduce anxiety and improve care for kids on the spectrum.

It's also a smart business move: Nassau County has one of the highest concentrations of families seeking autism services on Long Island, partly because of strong school district programs in places like Great Neck and Roslyn. Now those families have a hospital that gets it too.

Source: LI Press - New Hyde Park
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Gas prices on Long Island hit $4 average for first time since 2022, AAA says - Newsday

Long Island gas prices have surged in recent weeks, jumping almost 65 cents according to AAA, with current averages around $3.61 per gallon. The spike comes as tensions with Iran sent oil markets into their familiar panic spiral.

For context: we're still below the brutal $4.50+ averages from summer 2022, but this jump stings extra because gas had been sitting comfortably in the mid-$3 range for months. The timing couldn't be worse — right as people start planning summer road trips and beach runs.

If you're doing the math on your monthly budget, a 15-gallon fill-up that cost you around $45 in early March is now pushing $54. For Long Islanders already dealing with some of the highest property taxes in the country, every extra trip to the pump adds up fast. The silver lining? Oil prices are notoriously volatile, and what goes up usually comes back down once the headlines calm down.

Source: Google News - North Hempstead
news

Long Islanders struggle as utility bills surge 20%: ‘It’s all adding up’ - New York Post

Long Island utility bills jumped 20% this year, and if you're feeling that pinch in your budget, you're not alone. The New York Post talked to residents across Nassau and Suffolk who are watching their monthly bills climb while everything else — groceries, gas, property taxes — keeps getting more expensive too.

Here's the thing: Long Island already has some of the highest electricity rates in the country, thanks to our isolated grid and aging infrastructure. LIPA's supply costs have been climbing steadily, and those get passed straight to customers. When your baseline electric bill is already $200-300 a month in a typical suburban house, a 20% jump means you're looking at an extra $40-60 every month.

The timing couldn't be worse. Property tax bills just went out, summer's coming (hello, AC season), and plenty of families are still recovering from post-pandemic financial strain. For a lot of households, that extra $500+ per year in utility costs isn't just annoying — it's forcing real choices about what else gets cut from the budget.

Source: Google News - Nassau County
development

UAE-based delivery company set to move regional space from Queens to Bethpage

Aramex, a UAE-based international shipping company, is packing up its Queens operations and moving to a 48,150-square-foot facility at 999 South Oyster Bay Road in Bethpage, according to LI Press. The move brings the company's industrial, storage and office operations closer to Long Island customers.

This isn't just another warehouse shuffle — Aramex handles global package delivery, so this represents a decent-sized logistics operation landing in Nassau County. The Bethpage location puts them right off the beaten path but still accessible to major highways, which makes sense for a delivery outfit.

For context: Nassau has been quietly building up its logistics and distribution sector as companies look for alternatives to increasingly expensive New York City real estate. Aramex's move fits the pattern of businesses discovering they can operate more efficiently on Long Island while still serving the metro area.

Source: LI Press - Oyster Bay
news

Coast Guard rescues 4 boaters from 12-foot waves off Fire Island, report says

Four boaters got a harsh reminder Saturday evening that April waters off Fire Island don't mess around, when 12-foot waves overwhelmed their sportfishing yacht near Moriches Inlet. A Coast Guard rescue swimmer had to pull all four to safety after their boat couldn't handle the conditions, according to Greater Long Island.

This is peak "spring fever meets spring reality" season — the weather's getting nicer, people are itching to get back on the water, but the ocean is still in full winter mode. April seas around Long Island are notoriously rough and cold, with water temperatures still in the 40s. The Coast Guard Station Montauk handles dozens of these rescues every spring as weekend boaters underestimate conditions that can turn deadly fast.

All four boaters made it out safe, which is the only thing that matters. But if you're planning to get your boat out of winter storage soon, maybe wait for the seas to calm down first. The fish will still be there in May.

Source: Greater Long Island
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