Sag Harbor School Board Schedules Special Meeting on Marsden Street Plan - 27 East

Sag Harbor Express

Sag Harbor School Board Schedules Special Meeting on Marsden Street Plan

icon 1 Photo
The Marsden Street properties.

The Marsden Street properties.

authorCailin Riley on Mar 8, 2023

Just a day after holding its regularly scheduled meeting on Monday, March 6, the Sag Harbor School Board scheduled a special board meeting for Thursday, March 9, with plans to provide the community with an update related to the Marsden Street properties.

School officials declined on Tuesday afternoon to provide any additional information about what would be discussed at the meeting.

The status of the district’s plans to purchase four adjoining lots on Marsden Street, located across from the Pierson Middle-High School, with a $6 million contribution from the Southampton Town Community Preservation Fund to eventually develop into an athletic field has been in flux for months.

During a public hearing on the proposed acquisition at a Southampton Town Board meeting on February 28, a strong contingent of community members who have been opposed to the project from the start, many of whom live on or near Marsden Street, showed up in force, speaking out about their opposition to the project.

Members of the Southampton Town Board, including Supervisor Jay Schneiderman, adjourned the hearing to March 14 rather than taking a vote on whether to disperse the funds, saying they did not feel they had sufficient information about the plans for the field, such as more details on a stormwater management plan, to feel comfortable taking a vote.

The adjournment meant that the district would not have sufficient time to put a bond proposition for development of the lots on the May budget vote, which had been its original intent, leaving the status of the purchase up in the air.

The delay in taking a vote raised the ire of one Sag Harbor School Board member in particular. During Monday night’s meeting, Alex Kriegsman came to the lectern and strongly admonished the Town Board, calling out Schneiderman and board member Tommy John Schiavoni in particular, for what he viewed as hypocrisy related to another recent expenditure by the CPF on the John Steinbeck property in Sag Harbor Village.

“It’s a sad day in Sag Harbor when the Southampton Town Board has $11 million for a group of academics from Texas to come up and bloviate about John Steinbeck, but they have nothing for our kids,” he said.

Referring to a photo from The Sag Harbor Express from a party, attended by town officials, to mark Steinbeck’s birthday and to celebrate the preservation of his Sag Harbor home, he continued, with even harsher words for the local politicians. “Tommy John and Jay are hobnobbing with artists and celebrities, congratulating themselves about the Steinbeck purchase, but they don’t even have the courage to vote on Marsden.

“This is something they repeatedly committed to,” he added. “They’ve dragged it out month after month, and won’t even vote on it.”

He called the board’s delay on voting on the project “disgraceful,” and laid the blame at the feet of what he called “selfish and dishonest neighbors.”

“It’s time for a vote on this project,” he said. “And if they don’t want it, they should have the courage to say no.”

District Hires New Middle School Assistant Principal
 

At Monday night’s meeting, the board approved the hiring of new Middle School Assistant Principal Stacy Van Duzer. Van Duzer comes to the Pierson Middle School from the Greenport School District. She has a background in both elementary and middle school education, and also experience in instructional coaching.

“I think she will be a great addition to the administrative staff,” Superintendent Jeff Nichols said.

Calendar Adopted
 

The board also approved the adoption of the calendar for the 2023-24 school year, after discussion at a previous meeting. Of the three options that were presented, the board settled on what was considered a compromise option. There will be a few extra days off built in around the Christmas holiday break, to give families some flexibility when it comes to traveling plans, but the board stopped short of approving a calendar option that would have provided a full two weeks off for Christmas break, which would have sacrificed extra time off in the spring around the Easter holiday.

Nominating Petitions Available Soon
 

Nominating petitions for three open board seat positions will be available starting on March 16. The board seats of President Sandi Kruel, Vice President Brian DeSesa, and board member Alex Kriegsman will all be open. The deadline for submitting nominating petitions is April 17 at 5 p.m.

You May Also Like:

Budgeting 101

A simple fact about the SALT deductions is being obscured with Nick Lakota’s statements in the news. If the 2017 tax rules expire, residents will once again be able to deduct 100 percent of their state and local taxes. If all New York representatives vote together, the new budget will fail. “Fighting” for a higher limit is unnecessary. The proposed reconciliation bill cuts taxes and once again has sunset rules for four years hence. This is not creating policy, it is political posturing. We need a long-term, stable tax policy. This is not the way to do it. Overall budgeting ... 12 May 2025 by Staff Writer

Backroom Deals

Who is Jose Reyes? This question seems, by their reactions, to be the most important matter the Southampton Town Democratic Committee has to deal with. For me, and many voting citizens of Suffolk County who contact me, the question isn’t “Who is Jose Reyes?” but rather what other dark backroom deals are the Suffolk County Democrats and Republicans conspiring on. That is why the public needs people like “Jose Reyes” to come forward and shed some light on these dark deeds. To some people, 53 years ago is ancient history, but it is relevant today to remember “Watergate” and “Deep ... by Staff Writer

Business Briefs, May 15

The Clubhouse Announces Catering Partner for Summer 2025 The Clubhouse in Wainscot has announced an exclusive partnership with premium international hospitality group Rhubarb Hospitality Collection as the preferred catering partner for the upcoming summer season. Events by RHC East expanded to the Hamptons last summer and crafted events with innovative cuisine, elegant food, modern sensibilities and genuine hospitality, according to a press release. Rhubarb Hospitality Collection is a preferred catering partner to several New York venues including the New York Public Library and the Metropolitan Museum of Art, MoMA. Executive Chef Paul Marrocco has more than two decades of experience ... by Staff Writer

Keeping the Public Trust

By Michael Anthony, Andrea Klausner, George Lynch, Barbara Weber-Floyd The public entrance to The Southampton Press informs visitors that good journalism exists here. The walls are festooned with award plaques signifying a long history of excellence in reporting the news, sharing opinions and otherwise keeping the community well-informed. Sometimes, though, a person of ill will takes advantage of the best, and that brings us all down. On May 8, The Press published “A Note From the Editor” acknowledging that the letter writer calling himself “Jose Reyes,” sometimes from Hampton Bays and sometimes from Southampton, is a fictitious person. After members ... by Michael Anthony, Andrea Klausner, George Lynch, Barbara Weber-Floyd

Schools Preparing for New York State 'Bell-to-Bell' Cellphone Ban That Will Take Effect in September

It’s official: When the new school year starts in September, students in New York State’s ... by Cailin Riley

Express Sessions: The South Fork's Bounty, on Land and at Sea

The latest in the Express Sessions panel discussion series, “ The South Fork’s Bounty, on ... 10 May 2025 by Editorial Board

Hard Decisions Could Lie Ahead for Local Restaurants, Businesses as They Brace for Higher Tariffs

In a matter of weeks, harvest season will begin across the region, kicking off a ... by Michelle Trauring

Under Siege

Our Sag Harbor park tennis courts are under siege. There are eight clay courts and two hard courts. Information was just given at the start of the season that the hard courts will be given over to pickleball, as they were last season, but will be resurfaced and used only for pickleball — not to be shared for tennis, also. Two of the now eight clay courts, on the upper level, are to be paved this summer, I was told, so that the high school teams can use hard courts for practice in fall and spring. The timing of this ... by Staff Writer

Overstating

Kudos to the Board of Trustees of North Haven for addressing the continuous issue of cellphone coverage in North Haven. Poor to no cellphone coverage in and around North Haven is a matter of safety and security that needs to be improved. The two authors of the letters “It’s a Haven” and “Money Grab” from the May 1 issue of The Sag Harbor Express both overstated the size and footprint of a single cell tower. The tower size discussed in the last Board of Trustees meeting was a 110-foot tower, with a base of 2,500 square feet — not 150 ... by Staff Writer

Miracle Space-Age Fabrics of the 1980s

I fractured my patella in March. I was skiing in Colorado. As I stood up from the chairlift, the top of my kneecap broke away. Crazy, right? We couldn’t figure out how it happened. One doctor thought my thigh muscles were so strong, they pulled the bone apart. Those millions of squats I’ve done in the past must have given me the quadriceps of 10 men. But can the quadriceps of 10 men break a bone? If so, are they strong enough to lift a car? Lifting a car would be bad-expletive. Since it happened at the top of the ... by Tracy Grathwohl