Latest News

Budget passes: Kanarvogel and Graffagnino continue on board
Tales of the Black Cat: Indie bookseller flourishing on Island
South Ferry crew quickly douses car fire Sunday afternoon
District gets ‘qualified’ financial report from auditors
Column: When the IRS tried to muscle me
Don’t forget to vote: Polls open until 9 p.m.
Grants could raise $400K for Historical Society
Eye on the Ball: Honoring our greatest Island athletes
Obituary: Reporter staffer David Lee Draper
North Fork farmers say they're not the one with issues

Sports

Eye on the Ball: Honoring our greatest Island athletes

May 20, 2013

Bucks seek housing: looking at alternatives and volunteers

May 16, 2013

Bucks seek housing: Meeting to field residents’ questions

May 13, 2013

Education

Budget passes: Kanarvogel and Graffagnino continue on board

May 21, 2013

Don’t forget to vote: Polls open until 9 p.m.

May 20, 2013

The Incredible Hulk? Spider Man? Mr. Becker, is that you?

May 16, 2013

Business

North Fork farmers say they're not the one with issues

May 19, 2013

Chamber gives Town Board date for holiday fireworks

May 16, 2013

Japanese eatery now open in Greenport

May 12, 2013

Community

Bucks seek housing: looking at alternatives and volunteers

May 16, 2013

Paper gobbler set to roll into town Saturday

May 15, 2013

Board of Ed presents its budget numbers

May 13, 2013

Obituaries

Obituary: Reporter staffer David Lee Draper

May 20, 2013

Obituaries: Elmer August Kestler Jr., Lawrence William Sliker

May 9, 2013

Obituaries: Draper, Rodgers

March 7, 2013

Real Estate

Good grief: ‘Grievance Day’ looms at Assessor’s office

May 14, 2013

High end real estate deals escalate

May 1, 2013

Shed plan rejected: ZBA says ‘detriment’ to neighborhood

April 26, 2013

Opinion

Column: When the IRS tried to muscle me

May 21, 2013

Eye on the Ball: Honoring our greatest Island athletes

May 20, 2013

Inside Out: Lockdown? Not for me on Patriot’s Day

May 17, 2013

This week in Shelter Island history

FILE PHOTO | In January 1993 School Superintendent Marlene Berman and Board of Education president Robert Reylek cut the  ribbon marking the opening of Shelter Island School’s new middle school wing.

10 YEARS AGO
Island will study option of bringing public water

Town Board members agreed in 2003 to work with Suffolk County Water Authority officials on a feasibility study of bringing public water to Shelter Island  At issue was whether the cost of installing public water to the Island would be cost effective. SCWA was paying for an independent study that could lay out various scenarios for providing off-island water to residents. While agreeing to the study, Councilwoman Christine Lewis said she didn’t think there was any groundswell of people asking for public water and thought there was an “aversion” to doing so. Still, she said residents had the right to learn about their options before a decision was made.

POSTSCRIPT: Today the Island remains independent of the Suffolk County Water Authority with generally strong feelings of wanting to continue to depend on well water.

20 YEARS AGO
New school wing opens

A ribbon cutting marked the opening of the middle school wing in January 1993. It was one of the area’s first middle school programs designed to provide special attention to students in grades six through eight, a time seen as critical in their development. The still operational program offers individual attention to students through advisory sessions with teachers. The focus is on both students’ academic and emotional development.

POSTSCRIPT: This month, Superintendent Michael Hynes outlined a long-term plan that will shake up academics and the use of space in the school. It won’t change the separate space and approach to the middle school, but will result in changes aimed at improving student performances in writing, math, science and technology.

30 YEARS AGO
Saving the yearbook

It was a tight economy back in 1983 when students approached the Board of Education to plea for a $2,000 infusion of money to save the yearbook for that year’s graduating class. Revenues from advertising were down and production costs were up, yearbook editor Rebecca Kilb  said. Without the money, the project would have to be abandoned, she said. But the board, sensitive to the importance of the yearbook, was able to move funds to accommodate the request.

POSTSCRIPT: The Board of Education is about to start its budget review process for the 2013-14 school year, again with the state-imposed 2-percent tax cap that will likely require dipping into the district’s reserve funds, but also curtailing spending wherever possible.

50 YEARS AGO
Ferry to Connecticut may disappear into history

That was a front page headline in January 1963 when the ferry between Orient Point and New London, then operated by New York City-based McAllister Brothers, was threatened with closure by the U.S. Department of Agriculture. The company was warned that unless it improved equipment, it would not see its contract renewed to shuttle workers from Orient Point to the Animal Disease Control Center on Plum Island. Then Plum Island acting director Jerry Callis said the boats had inadequate seating, poor ventilation, insufficient facilities and were untidy. Company officials denied the charges and said if the government contract for the Plum Island run were to be cancelled, the ferry service between the two states would be stopped altogether or only run in summer months.

POSTSCRIPT: Today, the Wronoski family operates Cross Sound Ferry that shuttles people and vehicles between Orient Point and New London and its owners were honored by the North Fork Chamber of Commerce  with a Community Service Award last year.