Village trustees want to make improvements on the emergency communication system, they approved a Fine Arts Festival in June, and accepted a $20,000 donation to the Police and Fire Departments.
Patch talks to commuters who travel to New York City daily, and asks them if the recent terror plot -- and subsequent scares -- will make them reconsider working in the Big Apple.
A new restaurant tenant is announced but Tuesday's Law Committee once again went into closed session to further discuss the parking lot lease on Weaver St.
20-year Scarsdale resident Bob Cohen is looking to unseat 13-term State Senator Suzi Oppenheimer.
Seiden is running in the first contested school board election in more than 20 years.
The ever-controversial development for the historical tavern at 2-4 Weaver St. comes before the Board of Trustees tonight.
New Jersey's Mount Laurel Doctrine is similar in spirit, criticism.
A glimpse inside the headquarters of justice in Scarsdale.
Tonight's the last night for Scarsdale residents to speak their minds about the proposed increase to local taxes.
In his first State of the County Address, County Executive Rob Astorino warns of calamity on the horizon if impending budget gaps aren't closed now.
Gov. David Paterson recently signed three bills into law aimed at increasing government transparency, including one sponsored by Westchester-area Senator Suzi Oppenheimer. What are the implications for Scarsdale?
We all know Scarsdale has a rich history, but how do we define what that "history" is? That was just one of the questions proposed at the first Historic Preservation Committee task force meeting this past Wednesday night.
A series of public hearings, which started tonight, will be held to gather community input and offer suggestions for how to affect change to comply with the HUD settlement.
A 2002 federal mandate requires the state to replace traditional lever machines with new electronic voting systems; New York is more than four years past the deadline.
Scarsdale's Harry Wilson wants Comptroller Tom DiNapoli to open up about a meeting that has become part of a sweeping pay-to-play investigation.
Outrage was the watchword on Wednesday night at the Westchester County Center, where over three hundred citizens came out to protest the county's proposal to eliminate the BxM4C Manhattan express bus.
Cuts are proposed that will affect ten lines spread throughout Westchester County and more than 2,600 commuters on a daily basis.
The Sierra Club will present an argument against the use of hydrofracking, which brings the possibility of gas contamination into waterways.
Legislators Peter Harckham, Bill Burton and Judy Myers joined with child care advocates and working families to emphasize the negative impact of the reduction of child care subsidies.
The new trustees, Jon Mark and Kay Eisenman were sworn in today at Village Hall.
Supervisor Feiner urges local residents to advocate for an express bus that's on the list of cuts to the county budget.
Sculpture dedicated on Monday.
Controversy erupted during the Planning Board meeting last Wednesday as a proposed construction project at 80 Garden Road drew a number of angry complaints.
Starting soon, Heathcote Corners will have a brand new look.
At Home in Scarsdale is trying to pick up where the existing programming for seniors leaves off.
Take a look, the budget is online now!
Last night the Board of Trustees announced the selections for the advisory committee on potential landmarks.
Summer jobs, Sunday hours on the chopping block.
The governor appeared at a town hall meeting to discuss the state's fiscal crisis and his plans to close a $9.2 billion budget gap.
Despite the roving power outages and the need to rely on a generator at Village Hall, voters came out for today's election and the votes were counted.
The Department of Housing and Urban Development, in a gently worded press release, announced Tuesday that the county's implementation plan for affordable housing left much to be desired.
A brief history of the development of, and challenges to, Scarsdale's unique single-party system
Proponents of Scarsdale's one-party system say it produces the Village's best policymakers and deters mudslinging politics. Opponents call the system elitist, compare it to the Soviet Union.
Bruce Wells invites all local residents to attend the Scarsdale Citizens' Non-Partisan Party Reception this Tuesday after the polls close.
The Heathcote Corners project just overcame another hurdle – the building inspector's declaration that new construction was okay was upheld on March 10 by the Board of Appeals.