• Women's Rally to be held this Saturday in Greenport

  • 2025/01/08
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Women's Rally to be held this Saturday in Greenport

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  • As LIPA continues to review prospective contenders to take over management of the electric grid, it has awarded a key separate contract for fuel and power-supply management services — one currently held by PSEG — to an outside company. Mark Harrington reports in NEWSDAY that services under the power supply management and fuel management contract for LIPA have been operated by a division of PSEG for the past decade. The service makes sure all LIPA-contracted power plants get timely shipments of fuel, including natural gas and fuel oil, and the program includes a hedging program that helps offset volatility of power supply charges, said Gary Stephenson, senior vice president of power supply for LIPA.

    The new 5-year contract, estimated at $20 million, was awarded to The Energy Authority, a nonprofit organization owned by six public power entities. The contract begins in 2026.

    The decision appears to have been unexpected by PSEG. A message sent to all PSEG employees from PSEG executives Rodney Dickens and Dan Cregg noted that LIPA’s board decided to "go forward with one of our competitors." Dickens is an executive adviser to PSEG who oversees the Long Island operations and Cregg is executive vice president and chief financial officer.

    The two men wrote that "as much as the outcome of this particular [request for proposals] is not what we had hoped for, it’s important to note that today’s decision has no influence on the RFP for the continuing operations of the electric grid of Long Island and the Rockaways. We continue to participate in LIPA’s RFP process and will inform you as soon as a decision has been made by LIPA."

    ***

    The 2025 local election season is getting an early kickoff this year thanks to the special election for a single Southampton Town Council seat, which the winner will hold for just eight months.

    Michael Wright reports on 27east.com that the Southampton Town Board on Monday approved setting March 18 as the date for the townwide special election to complete the last year of former councilman and now-NYS Assemblyman Tommy John Schiavoni’s term on the board. That has spurred Southampton Town’s two political parties to begin screening potential candidates and preparing to announce nominees — perhaps as early as this week — and has also jump-started the party’s preparations for the November general election, in which most of the town’s elected offices will be on the ballot.

    The timing of the special election, and the demands of state election law deadlines, seems likely to force the two parties to run the same candidates for the board seat in both the special election and the November general election — meaning that one of them would be left running in November from the position of having just lost an election, while the other will be a newly minted incumbent.

    ***

    A Women’s Rally will be held in the North Fork’s “public square” in Greenport’s Mitchell Park this coming Saturday at 1pm. Saturday’s rally is a warm-up to the Women’s March, which will join with and expand the People’s March on January 18 in Washington, D.C., Port Jefferson and Foley Square in NYC. Beth Young reports in EAST END BEACON that speakers will give short talks on the many issues of concern that need government action: education, health care, immigration and its benefit to the economy, bodily autonomy, housing and participatory democracy. As organizer Carolyn Peabody said, “We invite you to stand up for what we believe in and for each other. Join us to sing, to share inspiration and concerns. Make your voice be heard and grounded in community strength against the tide of misinformation, disrespect for women and undemocratic chaos that wells up to defeat us.” Organizer Randy Wade added, “Remember that we are many, we are determined, we show up and we won’t give up.”

    A Women’s Rally is this coming Saturday at 1pm in Mitchell Park,...

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As LIPA continues to review prospective contenders to take over management of the electric grid, it has awarded a key separate contract for fuel and power-supply management services — one currently held by PSEG — to an outside company. Mark Harrington reports in NEWSDAY that services under the power supply management and fuel management contract for LIPA have been operated by a division of PSEG for the past decade. The service makes sure all LIPA-contracted power plants get timely shipments of fuel, including natural gas and fuel oil, and the program includes a hedging program that helps offset volatility of power supply charges, said Gary Stephenson, senior vice president of power supply for LIPA.

The new 5-year contract, estimated at $20 million, was awarded to The Energy Authority, a nonprofit organization owned by six public power entities. The contract begins in 2026.

The decision appears to have been unexpected by PSEG. A message sent to all PSEG employees from PSEG executives Rodney Dickens and Dan Cregg noted that LIPA’s board decided to "go forward with one of our competitors." Dickens is an executive adviser to PSEG who oversees the Long Island operations and Cregg is executive vice president and chief financial officer.

The two men wrote that "as much as the outcome of this particular [request for proposals] is not what we had hoped for, it’s important to note that today’s decision has no influence on the RFP for the continuing operations of the electric grid of Long Island and the Rockaways. We continue to participate in LIPA’s RFP process and will inform you as soon as a decision has been made by LIPA."

***

The 2025 local election season is getting an early kickoff this year thanks to the special election for a single Southampton Town Council seat, which the winner will hold for just eight months.

Michael Wright reports on 27east.com that the Southampton Town Board on Monday approved setting March 18 as the date for the townwide special election to complete the last year of former councilman and now-NYS Assemblyman Tommy John Schiavoni’s term on the board. That has spurred Southampton Town’s two political parties to begin screening potential candidates and preparing to announce nominees — perhaps as early as this week — and has also jump-started the party’s preparations for the November general election, in which most of the town’s elected offices will be on the ballot.

The timing of the special election, and the demands of state election law deadlines, seems likely to force the two parties to run the same candidates for the board seat in both the special election and the November general election — meaning that one of them would be left running in November from the position of having just lost an election, while the other will be a newly minted incumbent.

***

A Women’s Rally will be held in the North Fork’s “public square” in Greenport’s Mitchell Park this coming Saturday at 1pm. Saturday’s rally is a warm-up to the Women’s March, which will join with and expand the People’s March on January 18 in Washington, D.C., Port Jefferson and Foley Square in NYC. Beth Young reports in EAST END BEACON that speakers will give short talks on the many issues of concern that need government action: education, health care, immigration and its benefit to the economy, bodily autonomy, housing and participatory democracy. As organizer Carolyn Peabody said, “We invite you to stand up for what we believe in and for each other. Join us to sing, to share inspiration and concerns. Make your voice be heard and grounded in community strength against the tide of misinformation, disrespect for women and undemocratic chaos that wells up to defeat us.” Organizer Randy Wade added, “Remember that we are many, we are determined, we show up and we won’t give up.”

A Women’s Rally is this coming Saturday at 1pm in Mitchell Park,...

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