Mission
To determine community opinion on civic matters, coordinate community action thereon, and to plan and promote the general welfare of the Edgemont community.
About
The Edgemont Community Council is Edgemont’s advocacy and civic engagement organization. The ECC represents our community’s interests and advocates for Edgemont at all levels of government. We maintain relationships at the town, county, state, and federal levels to advance issues that affect the Edgemont community. We are the only Edgemont community organization that represents all residents – newcomers, parents of current students, and empty nesters alike.
The Edgemont Community Council also builds community by planning events and supporting organizations that foster engagement and spirit. Each of Edgemont’s eight neighborhoods is represented on the ECC Board of Directors, and we coordinate with neighborhood associations where they exist.
Signature community events supported by the ECC include the Crane’s Pond Halloween Parade, Menorah Lighting, Tree Lighting, and Carol Sing events; an annual community-wide service event; and the Edgemont Lunar New Year Celebration in partnership with the Edgemont Chinese Association. The ECC also sponsors the non-partisan School Board Nominating Committee (SBNC) and the Edgemont Newcomers Club.
The ECC Board of Directors is comprised of 15 at-large directors and one director representing each of the eight neighborhoods in Edgemont.
The commitment to serve on the ECC Board of Directors entails attending a monthly meeting, typically held on the first Monday of every month from September through June, and serving on one standing committee. The frequency and time commitment vary across the committees. The five standing committees of the ECC are:
⮚ ECC Nominating
⮚ Governmental Affairs
⮚ Newcomers
⮚ Programming
⮚ Public Safety
If you are interested in learning more about getting involved with the ECC, please contact us at NomCom@EdgemontECC.org.
History
Edgemont is a community whose legal identity is as a school district (Union Free School District #6 at Greenburgh) and a fire district (the Greenville Fire District incorporated in 1913) with nearly co-terminous boundaries. Edgemont lies entirely within the unincorporated portion of the Town of Greenburgh, and as such, has no independent municipal government. Because the Town’s council members are elected “at large,” there is no member of the Town Board directly responsible for representing Edgemont’s interests at the municipal level.
The Greenville Community Council was formed at a meeting of fifty residents on Thursday, March 6 1947 to serve as the focal point for the community’s active, neighborhood-oriented civic associations, giving the residents both a community-wide forum for discussions and a non-partisan representative voice at Town Hall. In 1993, the Council was renamed the Edgemont Community Council, recognizing that the term “Greenville” was now more closely associated with the area of the community on the west side of Central Avenue, where the Greenville Elementary School is located, than with the entire community. The mission of the Greenville Community Council, established in 1947, remains the purpose of the Edgemont Community Council today.
However, the Greenville Community Council was not the first umbrella civic organization in our area. A precursor to the GCC was the Greenville Club founded in October 1928. The Greenville Club was organized to take care of the future development of the area, consisting then of all of Edgemont north of the Yonkers line and the country west of Edgemont as far as the Aqueduct, including Cotswold, Edgemont Gardens, the Fort Hill region, Scarsdale Longview, and so on. Its focus was on all matters pertaining to the welfare of the district, town planning, streets, schools, playgrounds, and all similar subjects. It had a significant influence on zoning matters of the time.
When explaining the creation of the Greenville Club, it was written in the October 12, 1928, issue of the Scarsdale Inquirer. “Certain Edgemont problems are met by the Edgemont Association, certain Cotswold problems by the Cotswold Association; but there are other problems of concern to us all, the residents of Edgemont and Cotswold as well as those of Fort Hill, Scarsdale-Longview, and other parts of the district, which we now have no way of talking over and acting upon. Zoning is one of them. The question of establishing some sort of master plan for the future development of the district is another. Still other problems will surely arise as the district grows….. The organization which we propose would provide a means whereby, in a spirit of cooperation with the Greenburgh town authorities, we could work out measures for the development of this district as we want it to develop and not haphazard — as to some extent it is developing now.” By 1935, it seems the Greenville Club was disbanded, allowing for the Greenville Community Council to be established nearly a decade later.
Today, the ECC is the sponsor of the non-partisan School Board Nominating Committee (SBNC), providing the impartial chairperson and underwriting the associated costs.
Since 1950, the Community Council has presented an award to an Edgemonter in recognition of her/his commitment and exemplary service to the community. Originally, the “Silver Box Award”, the award was changed from a silver cigarette box to a silver bowl in 2014.
