Nassau County Legislature Explained

Nassau County Legislature
House Type:Unicameral
Leader1 Type:Presiding officer
Preceded By:Nassau County Board of Supervisors
Established:1996
Leader1:Howard J. Kopel
Election1:January 2024
Leader2 Type:Deputy presiding officer
Leader2:Thomas McKevitt
Election2:January 2024
Leader3 Type:Alternate Deputy presiding officer
Leader3:John R. Ferretti Jr.
Election3:January 2024
Leader4 Type:Minority caucus leader
Leader4:Delia DeRiggi-Whitton
Election4:November 2023
Members:19
Structure1:File:Nassau County Legislature.svg
Structure1 Res:250px
Political Groups1:
  • Majority
  • Minority
Website:https://www.nassaucountyny.gov/489/County-Legislature

The Nassau County Legislature is the lawmaking body of Nassau County, New York. It is comprised of 19 legislative districts, with each district being represented by an elected legislator. It was formed in 1996 to succeed the Nassau County Board of Supervisors, which had been ruled unconstitutional.

The legislature serves as a check against the county executive. The legislature monitors the performance of county agencies and makes land use decisions as well as legislating on a variety of other issues. The county legislature also has sole responsibility for approving the county budget. All members can serve for as long as they want (there is no term limit), unless expelled. Legislators are elected every two years.

The presiding officer of the Nassau County Legislature is called the presiding officer. The current presiding officer as of January 2024 is Howard J. Kopel, a Republican.[1] The presiding officer sets the agenda and presides at meetings of the legislature. The Republican Party holds a 12-to-7 majority over the Democratic Party.

Composition

DistrictMemberPartyResidenceElected
1data-sort-value="Davis, Scott" Scott DavisDemocraticRockville Centre2024
2data-sort-value="Bynoe, Siela A." Siela A. BynoeDemocraticWestbury2014
3data-sort-value="Solages, Carrié" Carrié SolagesDemocraticLawrence2014
4data-sort-value="Mullaney, Patrick" Patrick MullaneyRepublicanLong Beach2024
5data-sort-value="Koslow, Seth" Seth KoslowDemocraticMerrick2024
6data-sort-value="Mulé, Debra" Debra MuléDemocraticFreeport2017
7data-sort-value="Kopel, Howard J." Howard J. KopelRepublicanLawrence2009
8data-sort-value="Giuffre, John J." John J. GiuffreRepublicanStewart Manor2021
9data-sort-value="Strauss, Scott" Scott StraussRepublicanMineola2024
10data-sort-value="Pilip, Mazi Melesa" Mazi Melesa PilipRepublicanGreat Neck2021
11data-sort-value="DeRiggi-Whitton, Delia" Delia DeRiggi-WhittonDemocraticGlen Cove2012
12data-sort-value="Giangregorio, Michael" Michael GiangregorioRepublicanMerrick2015
13data-sort-value="McKevitt, Thomas" Thomas McKevittRepublicanEast Meadow2017
14data-sort-value="Gaylor III, William" William Gaylor IIIRepublicanLynbrook2015
15data-sort-value="Ferretti, John R." John R. Ferretti Jr.RepublicanLevittown2017
16data-sort-value="Drucker, Arnold W." Arnold W. DruckerDemocraticPlainview2016
17data-sort-value="Walker, Rose Marie" Rose Marie WalkerRepublicanHicksville2009
18data-sort-value="Goetz, Samantha" Samantha GoetzRepublicanLocust Valley2017
19data-sort-value="Kennedy, James D." James D. KennedyRepublicanMassapequa2015
Council leaders! Position! Name! Party! District
Presiding officerHoward J. KopelRepublican7
Alternate presiding officerThomas McKevittRepublican13
Alternate deputy presiding officerJohn R. Ferretti Jr.Republican15
Minority caucus leaderDelia DeRiggi-WhittonDemocratic11

History

When the western portions of Queens County joined New York City in 1898, the remaining three towns were formed into Nassau County. The Nassau County Board of Supervisors was then established. It was a six-member board, and each member was a government official from the three towns in the county (Oyster Bay, Hempstead, and North Hempstead) and later the two cities in the county (Glen Cove and Long Beach). The Town of Hempstead had two voting members. The board used a weighted vote system based on the Banzhaf power index,[2] meaning the districts smaller in population had near-no representation on the board.

In 1993, federal district court Judge Arthur D. Spatt ruled the board of supervisors unconstitutional, citing its clear violation of the Equal Protection Clause for its failure to adhere to the one man, one vote policy, and failure to represent the minority population.[3] Over a year later, when board members had failed to provide a constitutional successor to the board, the judge said that if they kept ending up in a deadlock and could not choose a new plan, he would make one himself. The board finally chose a plan, creating the Nassau County Legislature, changing the legislative branch of the county for the first time since its establishment, and the first election for the legislature took place in November 1995. The historic first session began on January 1, 1996, with a Republican majority.

The plan adopted by the board of supervisors and5 written into the Nassau County Charter called for a nineteen-district legislature, with at least two black-majority districts. This new plan has had the legislature fluctuating from a Democratic majority to a Republican majority, and vice versa, contrary to the regularly Republican board of Supervisors.[4]

Salary

The legislature's salary was made $39,500 in the charter; however that document allows the legislature to raise or lower that salary by law.[5] In December 2015, legislators voted without much debate to raise their salary to $75,000 amidst a county financial crisis; this went into effect the session in 2017.[6]

Standing committees and the floor

All issues introduced to the legislature is sent to one of the legislature's committees for review and consideration. Then, it is sent to the Rules Committee for further review and consideration. Once through the Rules Committee, it is sent to the floor for all members to discuss, debate, and vote on. If passed, it is sent to the desk of the county executive. If it is signed by the county executive, it is now a local law and is codified in either the Nassau County Administrative Code or the Miscellaneous Laws of Nassau County. All members of the public can attend any public meeting of the legislature, and can speak at floor meetings at a designated time.

Committees

Law

All legislation intended to become local law is introduced as an issue on the floor.[7] If passed, it becomes local law and is codified either in the Nassau County Administrative Code or the Miscellaneous Laws of Nassau County. Ordinances and Resolutions are also passed the same way, but are not codified.

References

  1. Web site: The Nassau County Legislature. www.nassaucountyny.gov. Retrieved February 22, 2024.
  2. Web site: Power on the Nassau County Board of Supervisors. 2020-06-04. www.milefoot.com.
  3. News: Nassau Board Is Overturned By U.S. Judge. en. 2020-06-04.
  4. Web site: History Nassau County, NY - Official Website. 2020-06-04. www.nassaucountyny.gov.
  5. Web site: 2020-01-02. The Nassau County Charter. 2020-06-04.
  6. Web site: Legislators vote to raise their pay from $39,500 to $75G. 2020-06-04. Newsday. en.
  7. Web site: What We Do Nassau County, NY - Official Website. 2020-06-04. www.nassaucountyny.gov.

External links