Since February, East Hampton Town has lost the heads of its Code Enforcement, Building, and Housing and Community Development Departments, and the top two lawyers in the town attorney’s office.
Since February, East Hampton Town has lost the heads of its Code Enforcement, Building, and Housing and Community Development Departments, and the top two lawyers in the town attorney’s office.
East Hampton High’s baseball team made it clear with a 4-1 season-opening home victory over Hauppauge Monday that the Bonackers will contend for the League V title.
The Emergency Services Building was crowded with Blue at Friday’s East Hampton Village Board meeting, which featured Police Chief Jeff Erickson handing out awards and a promotion. Mayor Jerry Larsen also took part, handing out a new Top Cop award, which he said will be an annual event.
Police and firefighters responded to Apaquogue Road following a call of a gas leak on the morning of March 18. They arrived to find a landscaper who told them he’d struck a gas line in the road while digging a hole.
Two fires were reported in town last week, one in East Hampton and one in Springs.
East Hampton Town completed a pilot invasive species removal project at the 42-acre Springs Park on March 18. The park was closed while the work was being done, and town employees who spent the day guarding the gates estimated that 80 people had to be turned away.
The Wainscott Commercial Center will be required to provide more environmental analysis of its planned 50-unit industrial park near the western gateway to East Hampton Town, after a unanimous vote by the town planning board last week.
In January, when the Shinnecock Indian Nation received confirmation from the U.S. Department of the Interior that its sovereignty extends to the territory known as Westwoods, Lisa Goree and her colleagues on the tribal council should have been able to breathe a bit easier. Instead, they find themselves in fight mode all over again.
A bill to reinstate New York State recognition of the Montaukett Indian Nation, introduced by Assemblyman Tommy John Schiavoni, has passed the Assembly in a unanimous vote. It has now been delivered to the State Senate, where it needs to pass before it reaches the desk of Gov. Kathy Hochul, who has twice vetoed similar bills, most recently in December.
Adam Potter’s project at 7 and 11 Bridge Street in Sag Harbor took another step forward Tuesday evening, when the Sag Harbor Village Planning Board unanimously voted to deem the draft environmental impact statement on the project complete.
The Sag Harbor Village Board met Saturday afternoon to hold a public workshop on the village’s accessory dwelling unit laws, discussing ways the village can make it easier for people to build them on their properties, particularly on those that already have a pre-existing structure.
The new exhibition at The Sag Harbor Church, which features artwork by 16 Native artists, invites contemplation of themes that are critical to all Indigenous people.
The celebrated Danish String Quartet will open the spring series of Bridgehampton Chamber Music with works by Dmitri Shostakovich and Franz Schubert.
The first Animation Weekend at the Sag Harbor Cinema will feature four animated films and two claymation workshops for children.
The Sag Harbor Church's Creativity Conference will bring five notable thinkers and artists there for a full day of individual presentations and a panel discussion.
Bridgehampton’s Atlantic House is an excellent example of the tradition of structural reuse hereabouts.
It’s not clear when, or if, President Trump’s European alcohol tariff will ever go live. Nonetheless, the threat is looming over South Fork wine and liquor retailers, who have been forced to react to the uncertainty.
Durell Godfrey, The East Hampton Star’s longtime staff photographer and a fixture at community events from Montauk to Southampton, has once again been named one of New York State’s top photographers. At the New York Press Association’s annual conference last week in Saratoga Springs, The Star’s newsletter also repeated in winning first place in the Best Newsletter category, capping a successful awards season for the paper.
Among the many gifts for sale at East Hampton's Monogram Shop are Mrs. Hoagland's Cookies, crispy confections baked according to a closely guarded recipe.
Passover specials at Rowdy Hall, Nick and Toni's, L&W Market, and Art of Eating, and Candlelight Fridays are back at Wolffer Estate.
Pinot Noir class at Park Place, new menu from Loaves and Fishes, panel on dining in the Hamptons, Dopo la Spiaggia to reopen, events at Sparkling Pointe.
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