Peconic County, New York
Peconic County is a proposed new county on Long Island in the U.S. state of New York that would secede the five easternmost towns of Suffolk County: East Hampton, Riverhead, Shelter Island, Southampton and Southold, plus the Shinnecock Indian Reservation.
It derives its name from Peconic Bay which is the dividing body of water separating the North and South forks of Long Island.
History
Peconic County has been discussed since the 1960s – ever since Suffolk County moved its offices from the official county seat in Riverhead west to Hauppauge, New York, in more densely populated western Suffolk County. Due to the region's small population, contributing just 2 of the Legislature’s 18 members, the region was often overlooked by county officials, and were deemed "municipal orphans." Deciding that they would more efficiently run local courts, jails, and health services, municipal leaders began to seek the creation of a new county, tentatively called Peconic County.In 1996 a nonbinding referendum was put on the ballot during the elections that year on forming a new county that was approved with 71% of the vote. State Assembly Speaker Sheldon Silver did not allow the movement to advance, and blocked other movements, fearing a wave of similar bids to split up counties state-wide, in line with Andrew Cuomo's policy of instead reducing the number of counties via mergers. At the same time Staten Island had been pressing for the reformation of Richmond County, with the two movements coordinating between each other. In 1997 Peconic County Now sued the state attempting to force through the secession.
In 2015, New York State Assemblyman Fred Thiele championed Peconic separatism, and was dubbed the “Patron Saint of Peconic County” seeking to revive the movement after Silver was arrested during a corruption scandal.
Ideology
Peconic County separatism is almost entirely supported by members of the Republican party, especially as Democrats have a long standing policy of pursuing the merger of counties. Fred Thiele an assemblyman who supported the Peconic cause was a Republican, and said that as long as the speaker of the New York State House was a Democrat, the Peconic cause was impossible. Anthony Palumbo, also a Republican, supports the cause as a way to benefit the region from a financial standpoint.Criticism
, a former county comptroller and assemblyman, denounced the movement as drawing support away for the cause of turning Long Island into a state.Organizations
- Peconic County Now: Led by Larry Cantwell, former supervisor of East Hampton
Area and population