Bankruptcy Solutions
The purpose of federal bankruptcy legislation, sometimes known as Title 11 of the United States Code or the “Bankruptcy Code,” is to provide an opportunity for financial reorganization or a fresh start for legitimate debtors who are unable to fulfill their obligations.
Foreclosure Solutions
As you are undoubtedly aware, many homeowners are in arrears on their mortgages as a result of the 2020 recession brought on by the coronavirus. At first, most lenders had been understanding and would have granted a brief suspension of the late payments.
Debt Negotiations & Settlements
Clients regularly hire the Law Office of Ronald D. Weiss, P.C. to represent them in negotiations with banks, mortgage holders, credit card issuers, auto financing providers, landlords, tax authorities, and other creditors.
Mortgage Loan Modifications
The most common strategy used by our firm to prevent a house in severe mortgage arrears from going into foreclosure is a mortgage modification. Mortgage modification and other potential Retention Options are the potential goals of most homeowners in foreclosure because most people experiencing serious hardships with their mortgages are looking for “Retention Options
Credit Card Solutions
For consumers, credit card debt and other unsecured personal loans are the most common types of debt. There are a few legal options for handling credit card debt, including the following: Litigation, bankruptcy, and/or negotiated settlements are the three options.
Debtor Litigation Defense
Many of The Law Office of Ronald D. Weiss, P.C.’s clients face the possibility of litigation or collection activities from their creditors because they are accused of having debt that they are unable to pay or because they contest the existence, amount, or obligation of the debt.
Landlord Tenant Solutions
Landlord-Tenant Law is one of our firm’s areas of expertise; we defend landlords and tenants in a variety of legal proceedings before the Landlord-Tenant Court and the New York Supreme Court. When it comes to eviction and/or collecting large amounts of past due rent.
Distressed Real Estate
A. Pre-Contract When a seller (the “Seller”) sells real estate to a buyer (the “Buyer”), there are usually a number of important steps involved. A seller will first list their property on the market for sale. A real estate broker is frequently hired by the seller to help locate possible buyers for their property.
Student Loan Solutions
In this world nothing can be said to be certain, except death and taxes,” as Benjamin Franklin famously said. This phrase has recently been amended by popular opinion to include student loans. Since most jobs these days require a bachelor’s degree, the amount of debt that Americans owe on their student loans
Tax Debt Solutions
Many people have trouble keeping up with their tax payments to the New York State Department of Taxation and Finance (“NYS”), which includes sales taxes, income taxes, payroll taxes, and other state taxes, as well as the U.S. Internal Revenue Service (the “IRS”), which includes individual income taxes.
The United States’ Long Island has the hamlet and census-designated place (CDP) known as Old Bethpage. It is situated in the Town of Oyster Bay, Nassau County, New York. 5,283 people called the CDP home as of the 2020 US Census. The Old Bethpage Post Office (ZIP code 11804) serves it.
The water district, fire department, library, and school system are shared by Old Bethpage and Plainview, the hamlet next door. The Eighth Precinct of the Nassau County Police Department provides law enforcement services to the community.
For 140 English pounds, Thomas Powell purchased over 10,000 acres (40 km2) in 1695 from several nearby Indian groups, such as the Sacatogue, Marsapeque, and Matinecoc. The Bethpage Purchase is a tract of property that is roughly 3.5 miles (5.6 km) east to west and 5 miles (8.0 km) north to south. It includes parts of Melville as well as contemporary Bethpage, East Farmingdale, Farmingdale, Old Bethpage, Plainedge, Plainview, South Farmingdale, and South Farmingdale.
Since Powell’s estate lay between Jericho and Jerusalem on Long Island, and Bethphage, the biblical town (meaning “house of figs”) lay between Jericho and Jerusalem, he named his land Bethphage. The Long Island location originally known as Jerusalem is now called Wantagh and Island Trees; Jericho remains the same. Bethpage was spelled without the second “H” over time. Powell divided his acquisition among his 14 children, and it developed into multiple farming villages. The entity situated primarily in the central portion of the acquisition kept the name “Bethpage”.
The Bethpage Branch of the Central Railroad of Long Island, a railroad spur finished in 1873,[2] connected to a brickworks that had first operated in the 1860s on the area that would later become Battle Row and Bethpage-Sweet Hollow Road. Bricks needed for Alexander Stewart’s Garden City development were transported by the railway when it was constructed. For a few years, timetables featuring the station Bethpage also had regularly scheduled passenger travel. In 1942, the line was discontinued. In the woodlands of Bethpage State Park, east of Round Swamp Road, are the remnants of a locomotive turntable.Under several names, including Bethpage Brickworks, Queens County Brick Manufacturing Company, Post Brick Company, and Nassau Brick Company (when Nassau County split from Queens County in 1899), the brickyard operated until 1981. Grumman used the brickworks’ pitted ground for research on computerized mapping of Earth.
One of the nation’s first freeways, the Long Island Motor Parkway, was being built by William Kissam Vanderbilt II in 1908. Eventually, the parkway passed through Old Bethpage and stretched 45 miles (72 km) from Queens to Lake Ronkonkoma, New York. Reminders come in the form of street names like “Toll Place,” “Motor Parkway,” and “Vanderbilt Lane.” Battle Row Campground, Bethpage State Park, and the Old Bethpage Village Restoration are among the places where remnants of the former roadbed and a few bridges are still visible.
Under the direction of Robert Moses, the commissioner of Long Island State Parks, Bethpage State Park opened its doors in 1932. Nearly all of the park’s 1,400 acres (5.7 km2) are located inside the Old Bethpage hamlet. The nearby hamlet of Central Park became known as Bethpage in 1936. After the name change, the hamlet known as Old Bethpage received permission from the post office to use the new name, even though it didn’t get its own post office until 1965. It had previously rejected proposals to combine with the new Bethpage. The fact that Bethpage State Park has kept its name has led some people to believe that the park is mostly in Bethpage.
The Taliaferro Estate and the Benjamin Franklin Yoakum Estate were two of the at least two magnificent estates in Old Bethpage.
In 1960, the county of Nassau announced plans to build the Nassau County Fire Service Academy in response to the area’s explosive suburban growth. All of the fire departments in Nassau County receive training from the academy, which is situated on Winding Road.
The CDP’s boundaries were expanded during the 2000 Census compared to the 1990 Census.
Old Bethpage is entirely land, with a total area of 4.1 square miles (11 km2), according to the US Census Bureau. Despite being 40% larger, Plainview’s population is about five times that of Old Bethpage, which is mostly made up of parks and undeveloped land, such as Bethpage State Park, the Old Bethpage Village Restoration, and Battle Row Campground. Plainview’s size is 5.7 square miles (15 km2).
The CDP was home to 5,523 individuals, 1,834 households, and 1,557 families as of the 2010 US Census. There were 1,311.4 people per square mile (506.3/km2) at that population density. At an average density of 447.6 per square mile (172.8/km2), there were 1,843 dwelling units. 94.57% of the CDP’s population was White, 1.19% African American, 0.04% Native American, 2.94% Asian, 0.35% other racial groups, and 0.91% people of two or more ethnic backgrounds. Latinos or Hispanics of any race made up 1.93% of the total population.
There were 1,834 households: married couples made up 75.6% of the households, single women made up 7.1%, and non-families made up 15.1%. Of these, 38.3% of the households included children under the age of 18. Individuals made up 13.8% of all households, and 10.5% of them had a single person 65 years of age or older. The mean dimensions of households were 2.88 and families were 3.16 on average.
With 24.2% of the population under the age of 18, 5.5% between the ages of 18 and 24, 27.1% between 25 and 44, 25.1% between 45 and 64, and 18.0% over the age of 65, the population of the CDP was dispersed. It was 41 years old on average. There were 91.6 men for every 100 females. There were 90.5 men for every 100 girls over the age of 18.
In the CDP, the median income for a family was $100,325 and the typical income for a household was $89,771. The median salary for men was $67,917 while it was $40,353 for women. In the CDP, the per capita income was $34,666. 4.3% of people, including 4.0% of those under the age of 18 and 4.6% of those 65 and over, and 2.4% of families were living in poverty.
The Old Bethpage Village Restoration is located in Old Bethpage. A true replica of a mid-19th century Long Island town, the restoration opened in 1963 on a former Powell family farm. The complex consists of churches, a general shop, a blacksmith, a schoolhouse, a cobbler, and farmhouses that were all relocated from other parts of Long Island and then restored to their original settings. The county’s approaching financial deficit led to the closure of six museums in Nassau County, including the Restoration, in 2009. On April 1, 2009, the museum was forced to reopen due to overwhelming public resistance.
There was only one movie theater in Old Bethpage, and it was in the Tru-Value Shopping Center. At first, this cinema screened first- or second-run films. But it started screening pornographic films in the 1970s, and local outcry compelled the theater to return to its initial schedule of mainstream commercial films. After a while, the theater shuttered and was abandoned for a while until being reopened as the Plaza Playhouse, a live action theater. Up until June 2010, when it relocated to a brand-new strip mall on Old Country Road, The Playhouse was located in Old Bethpage. It’s a vacant site presently.
Youngsters can join a variety of leagues and groups. They can sign up for the Plainview Police Activity League (PAL) for basketball and the Plainview Little League for baseball. As the name suggests, the Plainview-Old Bethpage Soccer Club supports local youth soccer players. The Plainview-Old Bethpage local Boys and Girls Youth Lacrosse organization, Hawks Youth Lacrosse, fields teams that compete in the Nassau County PAL League.
“Skate Safe of America” is located in Old Bethpage and offers roller hockey and other indoor sports amenities.
Nestled amongst the homes of Old Bethpage are several community parks. Haypath Road Park, which is situated on Haypath Road, is the main park for locals. This park has a community center, playgrounds, a basketball court, baseball and softball fields, and two tennis courts. The town is also home to the Battle Row Campground, which offers 44 acres (180,000 m2) of space for trailer and tent camping to visitors from outside the area.
The most well-known of the five golf courses in Bethpage State Park, located near Old Bethpage, is the Black Course, which hosted the US Open twice in 2002 and 2009. In addition, the park served as host to the 2012 and 2016 Barclays, which are now known as The Northern Trust, and the 2019 PGA Championship.
Students in Kindergarten through Grade 12 are served by the Plainview-Old Bethpage Central School District. There are four elementary schools, two middle schools, and one high school in this district. Old Bethpage Elementary School is the only one of these institutions that is physically situated in Old Bethpage. Plainview is the location of all other schools.
Nearby Farmingdale is home to Farmingdale State College, and Plainview has a number of private schools.
Additionally, Old Bethpage once had two school buildings. One, a two-room schoolhouse known as the Little Red Schoolhouse, was built in 1825 north of the present Old Bethpage elementary school. Situated off of Round Swamp Road on Schoolhouse Road, this structure was occupied until the 1970s. The structure was demolished, and other homes were constructed on the site.
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