Rules & Licenses · Long Island
Oceanside sanitation is its own district, not the whole local government
Oceanside Sanitary District No. 7 handles local collection details, while other property and government errands continue through Hempstead town or Nassau County.
Published July 14, 2026 · Last verified July 14, 2026
Oceanside has a local office with the community name on the door: Sanitary District No. 7. That is helpful for garbage and recycling. It does not make the district a village hall or a one-stop government.
The district publishes Oceanside collection instructions, recycling guidance, special-pickup information, and directions for materials that belong at its Mott Street facility or at a Town of Hempstead disposal program. Those are sanitation jobs, and the district is the right first source for the current schedule and set-out rules.
Other errands keep their own routes. Oceanside is an unincorporated Census place in the Town of Hempstead. Building and zoning questions go through the responsible town office. The town clerk and receiver handle their assigned records and tax work, while Nassau County owns the county assessment roll. A sanitation district bill or election does not transfer those jobs to the district.
Start by naming the service.
Missed collection, recycling, e-cycling, or district disposal: check Sanitary District No. 7. A permit, certificate, property record, assessment, or town tax question: use the office for the exact address.
Long Island special districts can feel like another municipality because they have boards, facilities, and boundaries. In Oceanside, the district is important, but its lane is sanitation.