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Faces of the North Fork: Greenport Mayor Brings Change to Village

Greenport Mayor David Nyce came to office in 2006, he wanted to focus on updating the village infrastructure and getting a handle on the community's debt.

 

When Greenport Mayor David Nyce took office in 2006, he was guided by his fascination with the village's history and utilities department to make a positive mark on the village.

Nyce spent his early years in Pennsylvania before his family moved to Princeton, N.J., when he was about 10. Though he did not have the money to complete college, Nyce learned carpentry from his father. As he moved around the country pursuing a career as a singer/songwriter, his woodworking skills helped him pay the bills. In the 1980s, his band won the Los Angeles area Battle of the Bands and auditioned for Star Search. Not really finding his calling in California, Nyce moved back east.

He wanted to start his own business selling furniture out of a storefront, but money was tight so he started a set design company with a partner in Manhattan. The business was an immediate success, but Nyce said it was stressful. In 2001, he and his wife bought a home in Greenport to get away from the city. After he sold his part of the set design business and moved to Greenport full-time, he and his wife ran the Benton-Nyce Gallery until the economic downturn hit.

Shortly after becoming a full-time resident, he began attending board meetings. When questions were asked about how to pay for the Mitchell Park renovation and the village started selling off its assets, Nyce deciced to become involved.

He floated the idea of incremental tax increases over a number of years and people liked his idea. In 2006, a group of people suggested he run for mayor. At the time David Kapell was mayor and Nyce said he assumed he would not be able to win. Despite this Nyce said he wanted to debate Kapell over important issues, particularly the debt and the state of the utilities. 

When Kapell decided against running, Jamie Mills and Ed Swenson entered the race. Still, Nyce never expected to win. He went to every house in the village and spent $120 on flyers and postage. He informed the village clerk that he wanted a clean election and said he told her he would be checking to make sure the absentees ballots were valid.

“The buzz around town a week before the election was not only was it going to be close, but they said I was going to win,” Nyce said.

After his surprise win, he got to work the next day. Nyce said not only was the infrastructure a mess when he took office, but the internal infrastructure at village hall needed work as well.  Describing village hall as  “management by one," Nyce said you cannot “run a $9 million company" the way the village was operating at the time. He said the village is getting to the point where proper internal structure and procedures exist.

He said he also wants to see the wastewater treatment and light plant renovations complete.  His fascination with the village’s utilities was one of the reasons he ran for mayor in the first place and said he wants to restore them to money-making entities for the village.

“From what I’ve read, this village was at its peak when those utilities were at their peak,” he said.

His tenure is not without controversy. Last year, the mayor met with resistance after he announced the public would no longer be allowed to speak at the work sessions. He said open meetings law does  not require a public comment period and the comments made were often just "stirring the pot" and used as a political tool.

Recently, he has come under fire for asking the fire department to turn of its new illuminated sign because it does not conform to the village code. The fire department paid for the sign without taxpayer funds and needed a permit from the zoning board of appeals. The mayor reviewed meeting minutes from the February 2011 work session and said Trustee Mary Bess Phillips told the chief to bring it to the zoning board. The mayor said the village also should have reminded the department to go through the proper channels.

"Ultimately, it's a lack of communication on all sides," Nyce said.

He said he's been honored to participate in the process and does not plan to run after his second term is up.

"All I wanted to do was come in and do the best job I can and move the village in a positive direction," Nyce said.

About this column: There are a lot of interesting people on the North Fork and Patch will be featuring a ton of them. Related Topics: Dave Kapell, David Nyce, and Greenport

Gary M Charters

7:35 am on Monday, January 16, 2012

What a poor headline, the only change that was brought was loose in his pocket. Not only does he not let people speak at work sessions which should be that way anyway but at regular village meetings no was is allowed to ask questions they can only make statements as he refuses to answer anyone. He only speaks after everyone is done talking and picks and chooses what he might answer, half the time getting the subject matter wrong and refuses to let the person refute him. He also has given direct orders to village trustees that they are not allowed to speak either. He has changed the definition this country was founded on concerning a representative form of government. Shame on the patch for reporting this story and no real issues that are happening in the village and village government today.

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John

9:04 am on Monday, January 16, 2012

Good job Gary, unfortunately what the reporter forgot to mention was, in his campaign for mayor, his main platform was open government and being responsive to the public, a quote from that campaign was "I just want the people to start talking and asking questions" but now finds those promises as being " to political and stirring the pot" for him to respond.
What's become increasingly obvious is since the ST sent their last village hall reporter to Shelter Island, the Patch has become the public relations outlet for the Mayor.

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Gary M Charters

8:01 am on Tuesday, January 17, 2012

I did e-mail the editor of the Patch and asked if she thought their stories were a fair representation of what was going on at Village Meetings. Her answer was "Gary -- yes I do. There are issues that are newsworthy and there are issues that are not. We are not a gossip blog"

William Swiskey sr

9:19 am on Monday, January 16, 2012

Sewer Upgrade went from $3,000,000 to $8,000,000 and still not functioning properly. Seven hour electrical outages, $ 1,000,000 in engineering fees and very little work started. Streets looking like the aftermat of a B52 strike. Village employees living in terror, maybe the Patch should ask around ? The revitalization of the Village started by the previous administration is going backwards. Oh by the way he's talking about a 19% tax increase, was the Patch at the meeting when that was brought up or are we not allowed to talk about that under the Mayors' no freedom of speech edict.

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Gary M Charters

7:52 am on Tuesday, January 17, 2012

Instead of boasting about twelve thousand dollars in matching grants to plant trees (where some are less than ten feet apart) why don't they maintain the trees that are growing through the electric wires. We've lost our electric more times in the last twelve months than we have in twenty years.

William Swiskey sr

11:09 am on Tuesday, January 17, 2012

Sandy you want hard facts, check the Greenport Blog. Actual Documents proving actual Offical Misconduct by public officials. See if thats News worthy?

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