The Croton-on-Hudson Board of Trustees convened a brief executive session on the evening of January 14, 2026, but left the Stanley H. Kellerhouse Municipal Building without taking any formal action.
Meeting behind closed doors in the Georgianna Grant Meeting Room, the board gathered specifically to discuss personnel matters involving specific individuals. By law, New York's Open Meetings Law permits public bodies to enter executive sessions to discuss the employment history, performance, or medical records of particular individuals, provided no final votes are cast out of the public eye.
Trustee Simon made the motion to enter the executive session at 9:06 PM, which was promptly seconded by Trustee Nicholson. The entire board—Mayor Pugh, Trustees Nachtaler, Nicholson, Simon, and Slippen—voted 5-0 to close the doors to the public. Village Manager Bryan Healy and Chief of Police John Nikitopoulos were also present for the session.
After 36 minutes of discussion, the board emerged. Trustee Nicholson made a motion to adjourn the session, which was seconded by Trustee Slippen and approved unanimously at 9:42 PM.
Because no resolutions were passed, no applications were reviewed, and no public comments were heard, the meeting represents standard, routine governance rather than a shift in village policy. Residents should note that while the discussion itself remains confidential, any resulting employment decisions, appointments, or disciplinary actions stemming from these closed-door reviews must legally be finalized and voted on during a publicly noticed regular meeting of the Board of Trustees. The next scheduled regular meeting of the Board of Trustees will be open to the public, and residents can check the official village website at crotononhudson-ny.gov for upcoming agendas and minutes.