Fashion Finds Fund An Education Charity

Amanda Munz sells discount designer samples online and from a showroom on Route 110 in Farmingdale to raise funds for an educational foundation.

By Sophia Ricco
sricco@longislandergroup.com

The Fashion Foundation is a non-profit organization providing children in need with materials to succeed, and making designer samples available for a discounted price.

Founder Amanda Munz is a grad of the Western Suffolk BOCES fashion program and the Fashion Institute of Technology, where the Lindenhurst native witnessed the wasteful side of fashion.

“I was constantly seeing this trend of designers having samples piling up in their showrooms and warehouses, but no one knew what to do with them,” Munz said. “A lot of them were ending up in the garbage.”

Samples are created by designers working to perfect a piece before thousands of copies are made for stores. Often, many variations of a design or an entire design don’t make the cut. Munz felt these extra copies needed to be put to better use so she founded The Fashion Foundation four years ago.

Fashion Institute of Technology grad Amanda Munz rescues samples and overstock from top fashion houses to benefit students throughout the metro New York area.

 “From the moment I brainstormed this idea, I never thought, ‘I want to do this for fun as a hobby,’” Munz said. “This was going to be my passion, and I wanted to make this a huge organization.”

The Fashion Foundation receives hundreds of donated samples from designers, which are resold online and in the showroom.

“We have pieces from companies who just made this one sample and it’s the only sample they ever made,” Munz said. “Our customer gets that one of a kind piece.”

Every clothing purchase makes an impact on schools that lack funds for basic supplies.

“Our money goes a really long way, because we’re getting them simple things, a $20 donation can fund an entire backpack full of school supplies for a kid,” Munz said.

The Fashion Foundation coordinates with teachers to find out what their students lack, delivering the supplies directly to teachers in Brooklyn, Queens, Harlem, the Bronx, Manhattan and Long Island.

“When I go into a school and I hand a kid a backpack or school supplies and I see them smile, that keeps me moving forward,” Munz said.

Following the holiday season, the non-profit will have supported over 6,500 students. At their Holiday Party, guests filled 500 backpacks with supplies, holiday gifts, and a personal note.

“People are doing their holiday purchases with us, they’re shopping across the world,” Munz said. “Our holiday season is shaping up to be one of our biggest ones yet.”

The Fashion Foundation’s showroom in Farmingdale has racks and shelves full of clothing items that are all brand new and cannot be found on their website.

“Once they come to our showroom, most people come back,” Munz said. “It’s kind of a hidden treasure on Long Island that not many people know about.”

A constant flow of samples arrive every season from designers, giving the charity constant new additions.

“I’ve heard from my customers, that they actually respect these brands more because they are supporting our mission with their samples,” Munz said. “It’s a win for designers because when they donate they get a tax-write off and clean out their warehouses. It’s a win for customers because it’s super affordable. And it’s a win because everything is going back to local kids.”

Note: This article has been edited from its original version. Munz attended Western Suffolk BOCES.

Planting First Seeds For A Solar Farm

Multinational cosmetics giant Estee Lauder plans to construct a four-acre solar farm behind the company’s corporate building at Pinelawn and Corporate Center drives in Melville. Long Islander News photo/Connor Beach

By Connor Beach
cbeach@longislandergroup.com

The Huntington planning board members approved last week a company’s plans to construct a solar farm in Melville.

Manhattan-based multinational cosmetics giant Estee Lauder plans to construct an array of solar panels in the six-acre vacant lot behind the company’s corporate building on the corner of Pinelawn Drive and Corporate Center Drive in Melville.

“This is the first solar farm, or mini-solar farm, that has come before the planning board,” Anthony Aloisio, director of the Huntington planning department, said at the Dec. 5 meeting.

Aloisio said the proposed site of the solar farm on 7 Corporate Center Drive is surrounded by other commercial uses or parking lots. Estee Lauder plans to cover about four acres of the property with solar panels.

“It is fairly well buffered from what would be our normal concern, which is residential uses,” Aloisio said, adding that plans call for a significant landscape buffer around the solar farm.

Huntington-based engineer Christopher Robinson, who designed the plans for the solar farm, said at last week’s meeting the solar panels would face south towards Corporate Center Drive.

Planning board members praised Estee Lauder’s move to increase the use of renewable energy, but expressed some concerns about the possibility of glare from the solar panels distracting drivers on Corporate Center Drive.

Robinson said the panels would be constructed at an angle, “so any reflection that may occur would be in an upward direction.”

“There will be nothing that would reflect down to any vehicular area or anybody on the ground level,” he said.

The Estee Lauder building next to the site of the proposed solar farm already has solar panels on the roof, and Robinson said the additional panels would help the company “reduce their dependence on the grid.”

School Board Votes Against Arming Guards

The Northport-East Northport school board voted against hiring armed security guards at district schools, including Northport High School pictured above. Photo/Google Maps

By Connor Beach

cbeach@longislandergroup.com

 

The Northport-East Northport school board voted last month against placing armed security guards in district schools.

In a letter to the community dated Nov. 29, Superintendent Robert Banzer said the board voted against a measure for armed security on school grounds during the Nov. 28 meeting.

“This decision was not a rush judgment,” Banzer said in the letter. “It was made after months of careful, thoughtful deliberation, research and discussion with professionals from a variety of fields.”

Banzer said the board held two workshops on the issue of armed guards before last Wednesday’s vote during which they interviewed law enforcement officials, a representative from the district’s law firm and representatives from the district’s insurance carrier.

Arming school security guards has gained some traction on Long Island since the Feb. 14 school shooting at Marjory Stoneman Douglas High School in Parkland, Florida. Massapequa, Hauppauge and Miller Place are among several Long Island schools district to hire armed guards to patrol school grounds.

Banzer said while the district will not be hiring armed security, the district will “continue to refine our security infrastructure and protocols.”

“Over the past 10 months, enhancements have included the addition of security vestibules in six of our 10 buildings to safely greet and screen visitors,” Banzer said. “We have increased security personnel around the entire district, with a presence at each building.”

Northport-East Northport has also joined nearly every public school district in Suffolk County in implementing the RAVE Panic Button mobile app. The app allows district staff to call 911 and simultaneously alert authorities of an emergency within school buildings at the push of a button.

In the letter Banzer also thanked members of the community for their input.

“I appreciate the passion with which many community members spoke,” Banzer said. “While there were differing viewpoints, I know we are all united in our goal of keeping our students and staff as safe as possible.”