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Paul J Feiner

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Name
  
Paul Feiner

Role
  
American Politician

Education
  
Fordham University


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Paul J. Feiner (born February 14, 1956) is an American politician from New York. He has been Town Supervisor (an elected office with a two-year term) of Greenburgh, New York in Westchester County since 1991. He unsuccessfully ran for United States Congress twice.

Contents

Biography

Feiner graduated Phi Beta Kappa, Magna Cum Laude from Fordham University and holds a law degree from St. John's Law School in New York. He is married to Sherrie Brown, an attorney; they have one daughter.

Feiner has been involved in politics since childhood: at age 12, he worked as a volunteer in the Congressional campaign of Ogden Reid; at 16, Feiner became Chair of the Teen Democrats of Westchester. He was elected in 1983 as a County Legislator in Westchester County, and was first elected Town Supervisor of Greenburgh in 1991; he has held that post ever since. In 1998 and 2000 Feiner ran unsuccessfully as the Democratic candidate for New York's 20th congressional district, losing to the long-time incumbent Congressman, Benjamin A. Gilman.

Feiner's campaign website credits Feiner with introducing "Dial Democracy", whereby residents of Greenburgh can phone in questions and comments to Town Board meetings as they are in progress, televised live on the town's local Public-access television cable TV channels. He maintains a blog for residents to comment on policy, events, and local issues, and has a weekly radio show, "The Greenburgh Report" on WVOX.

Fortress Bible Church

After a decade of litigation, Fortress Bible Church was awarded $6.5 million in damages from the town after "the courts found officials had acted in bad faith and illegitimately used the environmental review process as a way to block the church's proposal"..."to build a 500-seat chapel and school for 150 students" (Journal News). "In a unanimous three-judge panel decision, Judge John Walker of the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit wrote that the Town Board violated the church's rights under the Religious Land Use and Institutionalized Persons Act, the First Amendment and the Equal Protection Clause of the U.S. Constitution".

Fairview Fire Department

The Fairview Fire Department is the largest of three fire districts within Greenburgh. Although the department is independent of the town's government, Feiner has been publicly involved with it. Feiner has criticized the expense of fire services in the town and supported consolidation of fire districts to reduce costs, specifically pointing to multiple, highly-paid fire chiefs.

In late March of 2014, as part of evidence given in an age discrimination lawsuit, anti-Semitic slurs directed at Feiner by Fire Chief Anthony LoGiudice surfaced. Feiner called LoGiudice's subsequent apology "a positive step but an insufficient one". Six weeks later, Howard Reiss was announced as the new fire chief.

Awards and recognition

  • 1982: Feiner named one of six national recipients of the Common Cause Public Service Achievement Award.
  • 1997: C-SPAN profiled Feiner's Town Board Meetings in special report.
  • 2001: Spotlight Westchester Magazine called Feiner "most interesting politician in Westchester" in its Best of Westchester 2001 issue.
  • References

    Paul J. Feiner Wikipedia