.
Feedback

News Nearby: Firefighters Knock Down Setauket Basement Fire

Check out the top headlines from the past week from nearby Patch towns.

Miller Place-Rocky Point

The Handlebar Restaurant, once featured on FOX's Kitchen Nightmares with Chef Gordon Ramsay, is long gone and its successor,.

The troubled location has its history, but James Dunn and Linda Metcalf, the owners of the new, aren't concerned with the past and are looking to provide great food and a friendly atmosphere in Mt. Sinai for years to come. 

Port Jefferson



In a filing with the Federal Energy Regulatory Commission charging British-owned National Grid with “perpetrating fraudulent practices and illegally exercising market power,” the village of Port Jefferson hopes to put the energy company under the microscope and expose a business that it says has kept prices on Long Island high and excluded competition.

Among the accusations are that National Grid has coerced the Long Island Power Authority into an extension of the 1997 Power Supply Agreement (PSA) on unfavorable terms for rate payers and stalled opportunities to repower existing and inefficient power plants like the one that sits on the edge of Port Jefferson Harbor.

These practices, according to the claim, block competitors from offering reasonably priced alternative energy or upgrading of inefficient plants running at minimal output.

In essence, the village claims that National Grid is a monopoly with Port Jefferson playing the part of trustbuster.

Three Village

Firefighters quelled a heavy fire in the basement of a home on View Road in Setauket Wednesday night in approximately an hour and a half.

The owners of the home and their dog evacuated the house safely before emergency crews arrived. No serious injuries were reported.
Public information officer Larry Hall said the fire started in the far corner of the basement underneath the garage, but said the cause is under investigation.

"Basement fires are notoriously difficult to fight," he said, calling the smoke condition "a very dark, choking black smoke."

Hauppauge


After a complete makeover, from the paint to the furniture and a new brick patio, the Smithtown Library is well on its way to soon being open to the public.

Now that the shelving and furniture has been installed, library director, Robert Lusak, anticipates opening to the public within the next couple of weeks after a  few more necessary steps.

"The workers first need to do a water tap, which is necessary to do so the fire marshal can give an inspection and then approve moving in content," said Lusack.

Kings Park

Ocean breezes, fresh air, baseball fields and sandy beaches all fit into the landscape of Kings Park and for one week a boy from Brooklyn will slip on some flip-flops and enjoy all a Long Island summer has to offer.

Newsletter & Alerts

Get the best stories each day and important breaking news

Subscribe

Not from Smithtown Patch? Find your Local Patch »

Loading comments ...
Note Article
Just a short thought to get the word out quickly about anything in your neighborhood.
Share something with your neighbors. Write a new post... What's up? Make an announcement, speak your mind, or sell something
Billie B May 20, 2013 at 10:17 am
Tomorrow is the vote..vote NO NOW or our taxes are going to continue to sky rocket. Unless we doRead More something this town will continue to spiral down. More taxes aren't going to help. We need to cut expenses and get ourselves on a fiscally responsible plan.
swataz May 20, 2013 at 09:42 am
Isn't that above the cap? Funny, when another news source mentioned 5 districts that are breakingRead More the cap they didn't mention Smithtown. Dn't worry, the district will bully and scare the parents into voting yes by threatening programs instead of doing what they need to do which is reduce administrative costs.
Ron W May 19, 2013 at 02:26 pm
We can all make a statement one way or another when we vote. However, that statement should be madeRead More on a state level not the local level. Boards of Ed are powerless to do any real cost cutting. The state needs to take this on. We need real reform in Albany to reduce the ever increasing pensions and life long benefits that educators enjoy. Combine this with letting Albany decide salary increases for all educators and we can guaranty tax reductions over the next few years. Its that simple, Boards cannot do these. Lets get Albany to move on these NOW!