Town government As of 2025, the Town of Hempstead is headed by John R. Ferretti, Jr. (R–
Levittown). The responsibilities of the office include presiding over meetings of the Town Council and directing the legislative and administrative function of that body. The position also entails creating and implementing the town's budget. One famous former supervisor was
Republican Alfonse D'Amato, who later represented New York in the
United States Senate from 1981 to 1999. Prior to 1994, the town also had a Presiding Supervisor, who along with the Supervisor, sat on what was then Nassau County's main governmental body, the Board of Supervisors, along with the Supervisors of the towns of
North Hempstead and
Oyster Bay and the independent cities of
Long Beach—formerly a part of Hempstead Town until its incorporation as a separate municipality in 1922—and
Glen Cove, which had been carved out of Oyster Bay Town in 1917. Typically, the Presiding Supervisor, besides chairing the weekly county Board of Supervisors meetings, acted as the senior official in the town government with the Supervisor in a more junior, subordinate role; a number of Supervisors moved up to Presiding Supervisor whenever that office became vacant, including, in succession during the 1970s,
Ralph G. Caso and
Francis T. Purcell, both of whom later went on to become the
county executive, and then Al D'Amato, before he moved up to the Senate. Having the Presiding Supervisor on the county board along with the Supervisor gave Hempstead—by far the most populous of the county's three towns and two cities—the most clout on that body. However, in 1993–94, a federal judge ruled that the board's makeup violated the one-person, one-vote constitutional principle and also gave no representation to the country's growing minority population. As a result of that ruling, the Board of Supervisors was replaced by a 19-member county legislature. Gregory P. Peterson served as the last Presiding Supervisor, as the position was abolished with the demise of the county board. The Current Tax Collector is Jeanine Driscoll.
Hempstead Town Council The Hempstead Town Council comprises six voting members, elected from a councilmanic district. Their primary function is to adopt the annual budget, adopting and amending the town code and the building zone ordinances, adopting all traffic regulations, and hearing applications for changes of zone and special exceptions to
zoning codes. As of 2026, the council members are: • Dorothy L. Goosby (D–
Hempstead) • Thomas E. Muscarella (R–
Garden City) • Melissa Miller (R–
Atlantic Beach) • Laura A. Ryder (R–
Lynbrook) • Chris Schneider (R–
Seaford) • Dennis Dunne, Sr. (R–
Levittown)
Other elected town officials Other elected officials in the town include the clerk and the receiver of taxes. The clerk is responsible for issuing birth, marriage, and
death certificates and is considered the town's record keeper. The clerk is currently Kate Murray (R). The Receiver of Taxes is Jeanine C. Driscoll (R). The Town of Hempstead formerly elected the offices of Constable, Overseer of the Poor, Town Assessor, Town Treasurer, Town Auditors, Superintendent of Highways, Overseer of the Public Cemetery, and Justices of the Peace. Most of these functions have been included in other governments or made non-elected.
County legislators Hempstead has 12 county legislative districts either fully or partly within the town. They are districts 1–8, 13–15, and 19. The legislators who currently represent those districts are: • Kevan Abrahams • Olena Nicks • Carrie Solages • Denise Ford • Debra Mule • C. William Gaylor, III • Howard Kopel • Vincent Muscarella • Thomas McKevitt • Laura Schaefer • vacant • Steven D. Rhoads
State and federal representation Hempstead is part of New York's
2nd and
4th Congressional Districts. CD-2, represented by
Andrew Garbarino (R-
Sayville), is the furthest southeastern portions of the town (parts of
Seaford), while CD-4 covers the majority of the town's composition, and has been represented since 2025 by
Laura Gillen (D). Hempstead is in parts of New York's 6th, 7th, 8th, and 9th Senatorial Districts. They are currently represented by
Siela Bynoe (D),
Jack Martins (R),
Steven Rhoads (R), and
Patricia Canzoneri-Fitzpatrick (R), respectively. Nine assembly districts are either within or partly within the town. They are Districts 12, 14–15, and 17–22. The assembly members are
Joseph Saladino (R),
Brian F. Curran (R),
Michael Montesano (R),
Thomas McKevitt (R),
Noah Burroughs (D), David G. McDonough (R), Eric (Ari) Brown;(R),
Edward Ra (R), and
Michaelle Solages (D), respectively.
Sister city On September 12, 2016, the Town of Hempstead signed a Declaration of Cooperation with the
Shomron Regional Council in
Israel's
West Bank. This council represents 35
Israeli settlements in that region. Signing the pact was its proponent Councilmen
Bruce Blakeman and
Anthony D'Esposito and Supervisor Santino and Shomron leader
Yossi Dagan. ==Transportation==