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Mattituck softball, baseball teams travel to Center Moriches
Southold elementary students grow and harvest organic veggies
Track and Field: SWR’s Udvadia, Fleming score triumphs
Recap: North Fork budgets pass by wide margins, runoff for Oysterponds board seat
Squire on why he withdrew from school board race
Local off-duty cop helps save Wading River man's life
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Sports

Mattituck softball, baseball teams travel to Center Moriches

May 22, 2013

Track and Field: SWR’s Udvadia, Fleming score triumphs

May 21, 2013

Baseball: Mattituck keeps its postseason alive

May 20, 2013

Education

Southold elementary students grow and harvest organic veggies

May 22, 2013

Recap: North Fork budgets pass by wide margins, runoff for Oysterponds board seat

May 21, 2013

Squire on why he withdrew from school board race

May 21, 2013

Business

Local farmers say they're not the one with issues

May 19, 2013

New vermouth, Atsby, made in Mattituck

May 13, 2013

Sushi, hibachi restaurant now open in Greenport

May 12, 2013

Community

Ongoing Marion Lake restoration project impacted by Sandy

May 19, 2013

Photos: Hallockville's Fleece and Fiber Fair

May 19, 2013

Art class receives wisdom from area seniors

May 17, 2013

Obituaries

Loretta Cullen

May 21, 2013

Brian C. Evans

May 21, 2013

Philomena Soto

May 21, 2013

Real Estate

North Forkers preparing for boxwood blight

May 20, 2013

Real Estate Transfers

May 10, 2013

Real Estate Transfers

May 2, 2013

Opinion

Column: Paying my dues — a tale of three unions

May 18, 2013

Editorial: Let’s hear from the public on for-profit races

May 16, 2013

Featured Letter: Let's cherish the North Fork

May 16, 2013

Greenport Village utilities director given six months to improve

JENNIFER GUSTAVSON PHOTO | From left, Greenport Village Board Trustee Dave Murray, Mayor David Nyce and Deputy Mayor George Hubbard Thursday night during the annual organizational meeting at the Little Red Schoolhouse.

Greenport Village utilities director Jack Naylor was reappointed to a 180-day term Thursday night — the shortest term of his tenure — after the board expressed concern over his performance this past year.

During the Village Board’s annual reorganization meeting at the Little Red Schoolhouse, Trustee Mary Bess Phillips proposed cutting Mr. Naylor’s term from one full year to 180 days because she has been dissatisfied with his oversight of the wastewater treatment and light plants. She declined to provide specific details on his performance.

After his 180-day term, Mr. Naylor, who was first appointed to the position in 2007, will be evaluated by the Village Board. It will then be decided if he will remain as village utilities director, officials said.

“There has been many a time … that I had to double-check, to ask questions, to make sure project deadline dates are kept up with,” Ms. Phillips said before the vote. “At this point, I cannot in clear conscience go for a whole year with a reappointment that we have no data, no sight of improvement without any report from the mayor.”

At the beginning of the meeting, Mayor David Nyce said he was excited about the progress made at both the wastewater treatment plant and light plant this past year.

Mr. Nyce said he expects the wastewater treatment plant to be completed next month and he plans to expand the sewer district. That will increase revenue, as well as help the environment by getting more homes off septic systems, he said.

Over at the light plant, Mr. Nyce said he believes the $5.5 million capital project will be completed in June.

Although Mr. Nyce seemed pleased with the utilities director’s progress, he acknowledged during the meeting that he and deputy mayor George Hubbard have held meetings to discuss Mr. Naylor’s performance.

Within 30 to 60 days, Mr. Nyce said, he and Mr. Hubbard will present a report based on those discussions to the Village Board during an executive session.

Village officials declined to specify details of Mr. Naylor’s performance because the issue is a personnel matter.

“I feel very strongly that there needs to be enough time given to show substantial improvement after our discussion,” Mr. Nyce said.

The board later voted 3-1 to reappoint Mr. Naylor to a 180-day term. Mr. Nyce cast the lone dissenting vote. Trustee Chris Kempner was absent.

After the meeting, Mr. Naylor said although he understands the board’s concern, he believes he has been successful in completing multi-million dollar projects with fewer resources.

“What I would hope would happen is that we would be judged as much on what we did accomplish as what we didn’t,” Mr. Naylor said in an email. “It’s a substantial workload compounded by the fact that we have less staff than we did years ago. Even when one puts in as many as 60 or 70 hours in a week, there will be times when you are only able to put out the major fires and have to set aside the minor ones for a time.”

The village’s other appointees were all granted new one-year terms Thursday.

jennifer@timesreview.com

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