Submit Your Videos For Staten Island’s Natural Beauty Contest Held By BP Fossella: Show Off Our Natural Treasures

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🌞 Seconds of Staten Island’s Natural Beauty Contest! 🌻
Editor’s note: Submissions for this contest end on Sunday. Enter now! Winners will be announced Monday. 

 

We are starting a new way to highlight the natural beauty of Staten Island. We are asking folks to submit a 6 to 8 second video of some form of nature located in and around our Island. It could be an eagle soaring, a butterfly hovering, a seal bathing, a flower blooming etc.
You can submit your video, and we will review them all and select a winner.
🗓️ Submission Period: June 24th – June 30th
🏆 Winner Announcement: July 1st
📧 Submit your videos to [email protected] or via Direct Messages.
We anticipate doing this four times per year: one for each season.
Let’s see what summer on Staten Island looks like! 🌺✨
Banner Image: Butterfly. Image Credit – Aaron Burden

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BP Vito Fossella

The Office of the Borough President has a responsibility to advocate for the entire Borough of Staten Island and all its residents, and represents the Borough's interests within City government. The Borough President communicates directly with the Mayor and the City Council to emphasize Staten Island’s budget priorities. In addition, the Borough President is responsible for reviewing major land use decisions and proposing sites for city facilities within the Borough. As the chair of the Borough Board, the Borough President leads Staten Island’s City Council delegation and Community Board chairs in the process of reviewing and approving the transfer of public properties to private use. The Borough President’s Office houses the Borough's Topographical Bureau, which maintains the borough’s official maps and assigns street addresses. The Borough President monitors the delivery of city services on Staten Island, and acts as a liaison between residents and city agencies when problems arise to devise solutions. The Borough President is also responsible for appointing one member to the Panel for Educational Policy and one member to the City Planning Commission, as well as some 150 members to Staten Island’s three community boards.

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