Politics & Government

Levittown 2019 Elections: Candidates, Polling Places, Hours

Here's what you need to know about the 2019 elections in Levittown, including candidates, polling places, voting hours and more.

Here's what you need to know about the 2019 elections in Levittown, including candidates, polling places, voting hours and more.
Here's what you need to know about the 2019 elections in Levittown, including candidates, polling places, voting hours and more. (Courtesy of Patch)

LEVITTOWN, NY — Voters will head to the polls Tuesday in Levittown to cast their ballots for key Nassau County and Town of Hempstead positions, including district attorney, legislator, supervisor and clerk. This year, Laura Gillen, the Democratic town supervisor, is defending her seat against Republican Donald Clavin, the town's tax receiver. Incumbents Madeline Singas and John Ferretti will also defend their seats Nov. 5.

Nassau has hundreds of election districts, and polling locations can differ even between neighbors across the street. Registered voters should have received a notice in August containing polling location information. If not, the New York State Board of Elections also has an online tool to help voters find their polling place. It also has district information so voters know what races they can cast ballots for, as well as see what party they're registered under.

Polls will open at 6 a.m. Tuesday and close at 9 p.m.

Find out what's happening in Levittownfor free with the latest updates from Patch.

Here's a ballot breakdown for Levittown.

Nassau County District Attorney

Madeline Singas, Nassau's incumbent Democratic district attorney, seeks a second four-year term as top prosecutor against Republican challenger Frank McQuade. As the chief law enforcement official for the county, the district attorney manages more than 350 attorneys, investigators and support staff who prosecute and investigate about 30,000 criminal cases every year.

Find out what's happening in Levittownfor free with the latest updates from Patch.

Singas, who defeated former Hempstead Town Supervisor Kate Murray in 2015, seeks a second four-year term as the county's district attorney. In a Patch questionnaire, Singas singled out the opioid crisis as one of the most pressing issues facing Nassau County.

While fatal drug overdoses have fallen more than 20 percent, "too many of our neighbors continue to fall victim to opioid abuse," she wrote. Singas also touted her office's efforts to open the county's first 24/7 drug crisis center.

"It works to provide around-the-clock medical treatment and bridge the treatment gap that exists when an overdose victim is released from the emergency room and their placement in long-term treatment," she said.

Her opponent, McQuade, a former police officer and longtime private practice attorney, has highlighted state legislation that reforms the cash bail process as the most pressing issue facing the county.

"With cashless bail, there will be an opportunity for criminals to walk away less than 24 hours after committing a crime, which can vary from petty to extreme," he wrote.

See also: 'Seismic' Changes: Nassau DA Candidates Sound Off On Bail Reform

The laws are designed to protect people from being jailed for nonviolent crimes simply because they can't afford bail. But the legislation goes too far, McQuade said.

"We don't need laws which dismantle how we go about prosecuting criminals," he wrote. With the right people handling the judicial process, like me as district attorney, crime will be handled the right way without baseless reprieve.

Nassau County Legislature - District 15

In District 15, which includes Levittown, Salisbury and parts of East Meadow, Bethpage, Wantagh and Seaford, John Ferretti Jr. seeks a second term after first being elected in 2017. He'll face Democratic challenger Frances Avnet and longshot Libertarian candidate Jonathan Gunther.

In Patch's candidate questionnaire, Ferretti said taxes and high cost of living are the most urgent issues facing his constituents.

"I intend to continue my record of passing no tax increase budgets," he said.

Avnet, meanwhile, took a different perspective. The Democrat said dealing with an increasingly diverse and aging community is the single most pressing issue facing her constituents. She said she wants to look at increasing public transportation and work with various ethnic groups to sponsor "nationality nights" where the community can "get together, eat some ethnic food, have entertainment from the spotlighted country and just get to know each other."

Gunther appeared to agree with Ferretti, saying taxes were the most pressing issue facing the community.

"People are leaving Nassau County and can't afford to live here," he said. "I plan to cut government spending consistently with cutting taxes"

Town of Hempstead Supervisor

This year, Democratic incumbent Laura Gillen faces Republican Donald Clavin, the town's tax receiver, and longshot Libertarian candidate Diane Madden.

The supervisor is essentially CEO of the town's government. The position presides at all town board meetings, directing the legislative and administrative functions of that body. The supervisor also oversees the day-to-day operations of the municipal government consisting two-dozen departments, roughly 2,000 workers and providing services to more than 760,000 residents. The supervisor also acts as the town's CFO, implementing the Hempstead town budget.

Gillen, a Baldwin native who now lives in Rockville Centre, told Patch the town's most pressing issue is reversing course on yearslong corruption that she said resulted in jobs and contracts being handed out to friends and family.

"When payroll is bloated, jobs are handed out as rewards or favors, unqualified people are hired because they are cronies, contracts are given to friends without regard to cost, or to friends who don't pay the town, it is residents who pay the price," she said. "Corruption is making the cost of living almost unbearable in Hempstead."

See also: Supervisor Candidates Speak About Corruptions In Hempstead Town

As tax receiver, Clavin said he met with hundreds of taxpayers. The single most urgent issue facing the town, he said, was taxes. If elected, he has large cuts in store for the supervisor office.

"I'm excited to tell Hempstead Town residents that tax relief if coming to the Supervisor's office," he said. "My first act in office will be on Day One, when I slash the supervisor's office's payroll in half, by $1 million."

As for Madden, the East Meadow advocate said money management and out-of-control spending were the most pressing issues facing the town.

"The way taxpayer dollars have been wildly misspent for decades has negatively effected, contributed to or created every single issue town wide whether it's crumbing infrastructure, contaminated water, skyrocketing taxes, over development, vacant store fronts, lack of affordable housing and insufficient jobs and the list goes on," she said.

Town of Hempstead Clerk

Democratic incumbent Sylvia Cabana squares off against Republican challenger Kate Murray.

The clerk's office maintains town board records and publishes notices of public hearings. It records town ordinances, local laws, personnel actions, petitions, proof of publication, yearly budgets, assessment rolls, fiscal reports, notice of liens, subpoena and court actions, bond and note registers, zoning ordinances and maps. As town registrar, the office keeps birth and death records, issues birth, death and fetal certificates, burial permits, conducts genealogical searches, and issues marriage licenses and various permits. Additionally, the Town Clerk's office performs wedding ceremonies. The office processes applications for rezoning, public garages, modification of restrictive covenants, gasoline storage tanks, and GSS ordinances. The clerk is also the custodian of town records dating to 1644 and maintains an inactive records center and historical archive.

Neither candidate filled out Patch's questionnaire.

When Cabana was first elected in November 2017, the Garden City resident became the first Latin-American woman to hold the position. Her father is from Argentina and her mother is from Cuba.

Sylvia received her bachelor's degree from Barnard College, Columbia University and a juris doctorate from Hofstra's law school. She worked as an immigration attorney for 20 years.

Murray, a Levittown native, has served as town supervisor, clerk and state assemblywoman. Clavin asked Murray to run, according to Garden City Life.

Town of Hempstead Tax Receiver

Republican Jeanine Driscoll faces Democrat Chandra Ortiz for the seat being vacated by Clavin.

The tax receiver collects taxes for Nassau County, the Town of Hempstead, 99 special districts and 33 school districts. That money is then distributed to school district treasurers and other districts. The receiver's office also handles billing and collection processes, encompassing complete banking, record maintenance, mail and accounting functions. The department also collects property taxes.

Neither candidate filled out Patch's questionnaire.

Driscoll, a longtime Bellerose Village, resident, has worked as an aviation attorney handling complex issues for a variety of clients. She has also been a village justice in the Village of Bellerose, served as president of the Floral Park Memorial High School PTA and volunteers to serve food to economically disadvantaged people.

Ortiz has been a resident of Nassau County for more than three decades. She earned a bachelor's degree from Long Island University; an ABA paralegal certification from Adelphi University; and a law degree from Touro Law School.

Ortiz is a practicing attorney who has represented numerous businesses, individuals and some government agencies. Her solo practice concentrates on various aspects of real estate, business and franchise law. Ortiz is also an adjunct professor at Molloy College, teaching real estate law. She was the first minority to be elected to serve as Dean of the Nassau Bar Association’s Academy of Law.

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