The Wantagh State Parkway is shutting down overnight for construction work in the Town of Hempstead, according to LongIsland.com. The closures are for a drainage enhancement project that will last approximately two weeks, weather permitting.
If you're one of those people who drives the Wantagh at weird hours (shift workers, airport runs, late-night emergencies), plan your alternate route now. The Southern State and Meadowbrook are your obvious detours, but so is everyone else's. Pro tip: check the actual closure times before you leave — these things have a habit of running long or starting early.
This is standard stuff for April on Long Island. The state spends winter making lists of what needs fixing, then spends spring actually doing it. Even overnight work on this major parkway creates ripple effects. Better a few weeks of inconvenience now than summer construction when beach traffic turns every parkway into a parking lot.
A Long Beach woman was arrested this week after allegedly attempting to snatch a toddler right out of their stroller, according to News12. The incident happened in broad daylight, which is the kind of thing that makes every parent's blood run cold.
Police haven't released many details yet, but the fact that someone was bold enough to try this in the middle of the day suggests either desperation or serious mental health issues. Either way, it's a reminder that even in relatively safe Nassau County neighborhoods, you can't let your guard down completely.
Long Beach has had its share of struggles with homelessness and mental health crises, particularly near the boardwalk area. The city's been working on outreach programs, but incidents like this show there's still work to do. Parents are understandably shaken — this is the stuff of nightmares, and it happened right in their backyard.
The New York Civil Liberties Union is suing Nassau County over a law that creates buffer zones limiting protests near religious sites, arguing it goes too far in restricting free speech rights. The county passed the measure in December 2025 following protests at Manhattan's Park East Synagogue, but civil liberties advocates say it's an unconstitutional overreach.
Here's the thing about these kinds of laws: they sound reasonable until you think about what counts as a "protest." Does holding a sign about climate change outside a church that hosts town halls qualify? What about counter-protesters at a religious rally in a public park? The NYCLU argues the law is so broadly written that it could criminalize legitimate First Amendment activity.
Nassau isn't alone here — counties across the country have tried similar approaches after high-profile incidents at religious sites. But courts have generally been skeptical of blanket protest bans, even with good intentions. The county will likely argue public safety trumps free speech concerns, but that's a tough sell when the Constitution is pretty clear about where it stands on prior restraint.
After 11 years of false starts, Hempstead's 246-unit rental tower is officially getting built. The Town of Hempstead Industrial Development Agency approved the $123 million project with a PILOT (Payment in Lieu of Taxes) agreement — the kind of tax break that lets developers pay reduced property taxes for a set period instead of the full freight.
The tower will rise where plenty of other "transformative" projects have been promised and fizzled out over the past decade. This time feels different, though the IDA's willingness to sweeten the deal with tax incentives suggests even they know this corner of Hempstead needs all the help it can get. For a town where property taxes already make residents wince, watching a major development get a tax break while everyone else pays full price is the kind of irony that writes itself.
Hoodline reports the project should break ground soon, which in developer-speak usually means "sometime before the next presidential election."
After six months of construction that probably made your morning commute slightly more interesting, New Hyde Park will officially open George L. Sakowich Park on May 8. The park sits on 3rd Avenue near the LIRR station — prime real estate that the village managed to snag a $5 million state grant to develop.
Mayor Chris Devane says the park includes separate playgrounds for different age groups and grass areas, according to LI Press. For context: $5 million is roughly what New Hyde Park collects in property taxes from about 200 homes, so landing that state funding was no small feat. The timing works out perfectly too — open right before summer when parents are desperately seeking places to tire out their kids.
The park's namesake, George L. Sakowich, was apparently "a pillar of the community," though the village hasn't elaborated much on his contributions. Either way, commuters will have something nicer to look at than construction equipment when they're waiting for the 7:42.
Two firefighters suffered minor injuries battling a three-alarm blaze that tore through a two-story home on Maytime Drive near Merry Lane Monday, according to the LI Press. The fire caused extensive damage and displaced a family of five.
The Jericho Fire Department responded to the scene, though fire marshals haven't released details about what caused the blaze or the extent of the firefighters' injuries. Maytime Drive sits in one of Jericho's quieter residential pockets — mostly single-family homes built in the 1960s and 70s, where house fires are rare but devastating when they happen.
When a blaze goes to three alarms in this district, it typically means mutual aid from multiple departments — a coordinated response that speaks to how serious this fire was.