Milton L. Burns was Riverhead Town supervisor from 1934 to 1937. That’s over 80 years ago. Yet a park on Peconic Avenue, next to (famous) Peconic Paddler, is still named after him. Isn’t that a wonderful legacy?
I think Jay Schneiderman would be humbled to have the Bel-Aire Cove Motel property turned into a park named “Jay Schneiderman Park.” Can you imagine: At the turn of the next century, his name will still be there for thousands of people to see, especially with the spectacular views in the background of Penny Pond and Shinnecock Bay, with kayaks and stand-up paddleboards gliding by, and fireworks on the Fourth of July?
That would be some legacy.
To be fair, if Mr. Schneiderman doesn’t want that privilege, perhaps he could offer it to Assemblyman Fred W. Thiele Jr., another good, and honest, local politician. Or Councilman Rick Martel, a man dedicated to the betterment of Hampton Bays.
Mr. Schneiderman should tell us, “Yes, park,” as soon as possible, because he has been dawdling over cleaning up the blighted Bel-Aire Cove Motel property for five years, and we are sick and tired of looking at it.
Jim Dreeben
Hampton Bays