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| Steve Levy |
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Steve Levy is a
graduate of Sachem High School, Stony Brook University (Magna Cum Laude) and
St. Johns University Law School. In 1985 Steve was elected to the County
Legislature at age 26. He was Chairman of Ways and Means Committee and Deputy
Presiding Officer. He served for 15 years before being elected to the State
Assembly in 2000. In November 2003, Steve Levy was elected as Suffolk
Countys seventh County Executive
The Levy administration lived up
to its motto of professionalizing government by hiring the best and the
brightest, with emphasis being placed on expertise rather than party
affiliation. |
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Steve Levy is a fiscal conservative whose
do more with less philosophy helped pull the county out of the $238
million budget hole he inherited upon taking office. He crafted the largest
budget reduction plan in the countys history, saving over $120 million by
cutting unnecessary travel vouchers and cars doled out for political purposes,
and reducing upper management salaries, including his own. This penny conscious
approach helped Steve craft capital and college budgets that held the line on
taxes and an operating budget that cut general fund property taxes by 2%.
Steve is making the county more affordable not only by cutting taxes
but by also increasing the stock of housing through his Workforce Housing
Commission that has identified numerous sites throughout Suffolk appropriate
for affordable housing. |
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| The new County Executive
has also transformed a scandal ridden, dormant open space program into one of
the most aggressive preservation programs in the nation. Steve banned outside
business conflicts, placed the program under the guidance of a renowned
environmentalist, and created a master list of five thousand acres of
environmentally sensitive properties and farmland parcels targeted for
acquisition and/or preservation. He also helped broker a $75 million open space
bond. |
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| Colleen West-Levy & Steve Levy & Ingrid Lemme |
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As County Executive, Steve Levy cut taxes while maintaining important
human services. Bus routes were increased, pre-natal service enhanced and
troubled youth were given crisis intervention to prevent them from being
institutionalized.
New reforms implemented in the Police Department,
including schedule changes and a new narcotics unit, helped reduce crime in
Suffolk by more than 9% in 2004, ranking it the safest suburban region in the
nation. Levys reforms helped increase patrols in the 7th precinct and
added extra foot patrols; all while keeping the police district budget within
the tax cap parameters for the first time in five years.
The tax cuts,
the enhanced services and the courteous, prompt response to constituent needs
all stem from the motto that is carved in a sign greeting all visitors to the
executive chambers. It reads: We Work For You.
http://www.co.suffolk.ny.us/webtemp3.cfm?dept=19&id=2358 |
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