Highlights of Village of Bronxville Trustees Meeting on November 13

Bronxville Village Board of Trustees. Photo by A. Warner
By Staff
Nov. 22, 2023: The Bronxville Village Board of Trustees met on November 13, 2023.
Bronxville Village Administrator Jim Palmer talked about a Zoom session with residents who live on Hamilton, Sussex, Sherman, Elm Rock, Lee, and Masterton Roads regarding the design of stormwater improvements in those areas.
Palmer also talked about the sidewalk on Route 22, which is completed, and the hedges that were removed on Dusenberry Road. The village will reimburse the homeowner for the replacement of those hedges. The removal of the hedges improves the sightlines at that location.
Jim Palmer also reported that Metro-North is working on the underpass from 9 am to 2 pm weekdays. They are cleaning the concrete, removing rust, painting the steel and concrete, and replacing sections of the steel. This project will take several months.
The Bronxville Village's Climate Action Plan was approved in this meeting. It includes a set of recommendations for the Village. You can read the Plan here. Trustee Helen Knapp noted that any project the village undertakes related to this Plan will undergo a thorough cost analysis before implementation.
The Board approved two resolutions related to the Bronxville Library outdoor reading garden. The first was a resolution to accept a $125k grant. The second was awarding the bid for the garden. The cost of the project is $750k. The village will contribute $150k. The "Friends of the Bronxville Library" organization has received generous leadership gift commitments and other gifts and is actively fundraising for the balance of funding needed.
There was a discussion of the parking meters in town. Palmer reported that the use of Pango has increased, and there will be a pilot program testing using credit cards in meters in the village. Coin usage is still prevalent.
Mayor Marvin noted that this is the shopping season in the village. Shopping local is good for shopkeepers, and it is also good for residents because it lowers taxes. The village gets $1.65 million in sales tax revenues. This revenue would be smaller if residents buy everything on Amazon.
The next meeting is December 11, 2023.








