Who They Are: Profiles of Our Elected
Officials
This week: Town of Mamaroneck Councilman Ernest
Odierna Other Profiles
by Paula Eisenberg

Town of Mamaroneck Councilman
Ernest Odierna
(December 3, 2002) "If you want to get something
done, ask a busy person."
That old saw could be Ernie Odierna's personal slogan.
President of a high-tech company, certified SCUBA rescue
diver, member of the Coast Guard Auxiliary, avid boater
and sometime-inventor, Odierna wasn't busy enough in
1999. So when the Democrats approached him to run for
a seat on the Mamaroneck Town Board, he said yes. Naturally.
Growing up in the Bronx, Odierna was busy even as a
child. Not content with the usual schoolboy life, he
skipped several grades in elementary school, entered
high school (the prestigious Stuyvesant High in lower
Manhattan) at age 11, and by the time he was 15, he
was attending City College. Several years of night school
and three jobs later, he graduated with a degree in
physics. Active in Bronx Democratic politics, he was
a delegate to the 1972 and 1976 national conventions.
"When I was a kid," he said, "Westchester
was 'upstate' as far as we were concerned. So it felt
a little strange to move all the way up here."
He and his family moved to Larchmont Gardens in 1986,
and Odierna promply became involved in local community
work as part of the Larchmont Gardens Civic Association.
Back then, the biggest issue facing his neighborhood
was the proposed residential development of Bonnie Briar
Country Club, a plan Odierna called "the Ikea of
that time." For 10 years, he attended meetings
and work sessions of the Town Board, acting as liaison
between the Board and the Civic Association.
"I'd been in the audience all those years,"
he said, "After a while, I wanted to have a stronger
impact on what was happening. I felt I knew as much
as anyone about the issues, and I thought I could come
up with some innovative solutions. So when the Democrats
asked me if might want to be a candidate, I said yes."
He ran against Warren Goodman in 1998 to serve out a
two-year unexpired term, and he was re-elected in November,
2001 to a full four-year term.
Odierna wants to get more residents involved in Town
government. "We have a very intelligent constituency,"
he told the Gazette, "And they would like to be
more involved. But we need better communication. Technology
is our friend, and we need a better website. A new one
is in the offing, in fact, and it'll be more informative
and interactive. I'd even like to see streaming video
of our Town meetings on the site." Odierna is serious
about getting more feedback from citizens. He invites
people to email him with their concerns, at ernieo1@optonline.net.
With three years to go in his current term, Odierna
is busy working on many issues. Among them is his concern
about recreational opportunities for seniors and retired
people in the Town. "Most of the recreational energy
goes toward younger people," he said. "That's
fine, but older folks need things to do in their free
time, too." To that end, he has helped get shuffleboard
courts installed at Memorial Park, and he'd like to
get seniors involved with computing.
Dealing with sanitation issues may not be as much fun
as shuffleboard, but Odierna hasn't shied away from
the problems of missed pick-ups, confusing recycling
rules, and even the over-supply of goose droppings at
the Duck Pond in Larchmont Gardens. (Last summer, he
invented a vacuum scooper to deal with that problem.)
"The Board recognizes the organic waste recycling
program didn't work too well last summer," he said.
"We're working on new procedures for next summer,
and we'd like to hear from the people. Any ideas are
welcome."
Quality of life issues may not be glamorous, but to
Odierna, they're the meat-and-potatoes of local political
life. And he thinks more citizen involvement is the
solution. "Let's get more people involved in brainstorming
about these problems. Everybody here is a genius, right?
Let's get them talking, put that brain-power to work.
Who knows, maybe we can even do something about traffic
safety."
One thing that surprises him, Odierna said, is how
few local residents express outrage at high taxes. "We
pay a lot in taxes!" he fumed. "Nobody seems
to care. Spending on the schools is, in my mind, out
of control. Nobody ever says 'no' to the school board."
He is especially concerned about the continuing problems
at the Hommocks Pool. "Why should Rye and Scarsdale
have beautiful pools, but we can't?" He would also
like to see more use of the Hommocks ice rink, for light
shows and concerts. And people should be able to rent
skating helmets, as well as skates.
Will he run again when his term expires? "I'm
leaning in that direction," he said. "Some
people are still active and vibrant into their 80's
and 90's, and some thirty-year-olds are already tired
and worn-out and unenthusiastic. I'm 65, and I feel
good. Why shouldn't I keep on doing what I love to do?"
Stay tuned.
We have contacted all of the elected leaders in the
Village and the Town, and the profiles will appear in
the order in which the interviews were conducted. Check
back frequently for more profiles.
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